 Today I have the pleasure of speaking with Peter Casham from Imperial Mining. How are you today, Peter? Great. Tracy, thanks for having me today. It's been too long since we've received an update. What is going on with Imperial Mining? Very busy summer and fall, trying to get our projects up and going since inception in January. A gold project in Shibugomo, the south belt I told you about was in a press release earlier this week. And then, of course, active on our Crater Lake Scandium project in Northeastern Quebec. And we're doing a lot of metals marketing, strategic marketing for Scandium, particularly in the EU and the US, trying to get a pulse of the market. Because I think there's some potential big growth happening in the Scandium space. Okay. So you've jumped right into Scandium, so let's go there. Is it too late to get into Scandium because Scandium has had some major movement in the last year. Correct. Well, I bring note to the attention to that Bloomberg article at the end of October and speaking to the Scandium market, some of the players are in there. I was particularly surprised and pleased of the projections on consumption by 2035 of 1,800 tons of Scandium. The current players, the advanced players that are in Scandium space, have maybe 400. So I think there's a lot of opportunity for new players to come in and establish themselves and what I think is going to be a huge market going forward. Some of you out there may not be aware of the fact that Peter Cashin is one of the most respected experts and knowledgeable players in the critical material sector, so I'm going to ask you to dumb it down for me. Is it too late to get into the Scandium market? Not at all. I think that there's an opportunity for growth. I think we're just in the early, early stages, the benefits of Scandium are really fully understood starting in the 1970s and lots of R&D capacity went into learning the product and learning its benefits and looking for new markets. But all of that was pulled, the plugs were pulled on all that R&D initiative back in 2012 because they couldn't get any sustainable supply. It was China or Russia and those aren't reliable supply chains. But you're starting to see the peers. My peers now getting back into R&D with industry leaders and that's usually a precursor for explosive growth in the market. Okay, I heard that. Precursor for explosive growth in the market. I'm also seeing here that you just put out a news release about mining samples at Crater Lake project in Quebec. Can you talk to us about these samples? Well, Crater Lake is our flagship and it's a large intrusive complex. We knew about Scandium back in 2014 when I was running Quest for Minerals. And we did our work. We understand that there's about a seven, six kilometer long horizon that's very enriched in Scandium that we've only just started the dust off now. And this past summer was exactly intended to start opening out the zone, try to fully understand it and sample along its length for the purpose of identifying additional drill targets. I'm going to take this opportunity to also ask you about rare earths. Some people are discussing, especially on investor intel, that they're making a comeback. What are your thoughts on rare earths? Well, again, we're solely reliant on the Chinese for supply. And in any instance that they can, they'll try to manipulate the market. In the instance of this, it's a bit of pushback from the tariff war with the United States. And I think until we establish alternative supply chains, supply sources, this is going to continue. So I think it's imperative on industry, especially the consumers, that have vested interest in having this product to maybe jump in there like they have in the lithium space and get directly involved with the resource development phases of projects. They tend to be shy away from involvement with mineral development. But I think if they really want this stuff, the industry needs their support because conventional investors, most of the market players, don't like rare earths because they're traded opaquely. But there's huge value that can potentially be made there. And there's lots of players, there's a lot of resources, lots of exploration was done between 2009 and 2011, as you can remember. And there's some resources and advanced stages of development that just need the money to get on the go. So Imperial Mining, we've got sustainability. We have a critical material resource in North America. And of course, you're aggressively leading this march. Can you give us an update on the competitive advantages of why to get into Imperial Mining today? Well, I think it's important for your audience to understand what the sheer benefits of Scandium are. It's a hardener of aluminum alloys. It provides strength, it provides flexibility. It renders the alloy to be corrosion resistant. I think Robert Friedland had it right in saying that Scandium is a spice metal. You put a little bit of Scandium, 0.2 to 0.4 percent into aluminum alloys. And you can almost double the tension and the strength of the alloy itself. So I think that going forward, we have a North American source. It's unusual and then it's hard rock. Most of our peers have laterate deposits in Australia. They're in advanced stages of development. And I think that we could actually process our material using much more conventional metallurgical processes. OK, so you've got us interested. Scandium, time to get in. Sustainability, North America. We have great leadership, of course, and a tremendous board on Imperial Mining. What should we as shareholders anticipate, say, this next quarter, Peter? Right now, we've done all of our evaluative work. Our goal project is ready for drilling. The Scandium project, in particular, is we've got our targets lined up. We've seen some very, very high grades of Scandium related to the Crater Lake project, up to 2,500 grams per ton, when 250 is considered a reasonable threshold for an economic deposit. So our intention now is to diamond drill that, get a resource estimate on it, and then eventually, later on in the year, file a PEA. And that, to me, will be the trigger, I think, for more advanced work on the project itself. For those of you who have made money with Peter Cashion in the past, he's back. So Peter, thank you so much for joining us today. Thank you, Tracy. Much appreciated.