 Well, hello everyone. This is Byron King with Investor Intel, and today we have a rare treat, a gentleman named George Glazier, who runs a company called Western Uranium and Vanadium, a U.S.-based company, which is in the, as you can perhaps discern, the Uranium and Vanadium space. George, thank you for being here. You have not just an asset, but a producing asset in the United States. Can you give us just a quick rundown? What is it? Where is it? And what do you have there? Sure. The Sunday Mine Complex has been a producing complex for a number of years. We acquired the property from Energy Fuels in 2014, and have turned it on production. There are actually four separate mines, all permitted, all developed. We're in one of them right now, producing and stockpiling ore. I'm preparing to go into the other three. So the asset is an asset that has produced significant quantities of Uranium, Vanadium in the past, and is ready to produce going forward. It's located where- We do have other assets, but this is our first production asset. Okay. And where is it located exactly? It's in Western Colorado. Okay. Yeah. So it's historical Uranium mining country out west there. So in the United States right now, there's very, very little Uranium being produced when you look at global production versus U.S. actual pounds in the ground production. So are you one of those people that's part of that Department of Energy statistic that shows that there's actual production? There's really actually virtually no production. What we're doing is producing ore, and the Department of Energy basically used their production on Yellow Cake coming out in the final process. Right. Right now, they're probably producing almost none. The little bit that's coming out is just cleanup, probably maybe a little alternate feed material from Energy Fuels, but not much there. And then the cleanup of the old well fuels from in-situ producing companies probably produces a little bit. Almost none production of Yellow Cake. They don't report production of ore until it's actually refined. Right. Okay. Now, just to sort of get a broader perspective, obviously, there's an issue with Russia and Ukraine and the war and sanctions, what have you, and a large amount of Western Uranium, certainly for the final, and goes through Russia. They have an extensive Uranium and nuclear complex there. What do the current world circumstances indicate for a company like yours, like Western Uranium and Vanadium? How does what happens in Europe affect what happens in Colorado? Well, substantially, obviously, if we look at the reliance of the Germans on Russian gas and how that is affecting their whole energy supply, the US utilities are not as reliant on Russian nuclear fuel, but they're fairly reliant. And if you cut that off quickly, potentially, we would have to cut our production from the utilities. So I don't think that's going to happen quickly, but I think the idea that we cannot be reliant on potentially unstable sources of nuclear fuel, the utilities certainly are going to look at Western suppliers for all components of nuclear fuel. And I think that's good for, not only our company, it's good for all Western producers, whether Uranium, conversion, or enrichment. I think the lesson we've learned is you basically have to have stable sources of the supply. And whether Russian has been a stable source in the past, but with the political issues now, I think we're going to be forced to look at very stable Western suppliers. Well, for investors out there or potential share buyers of a company like yours, tell us about the nature of the company. What's your share structure? Do you have some money in the bank? Have you been raising money? What's going on with your company in that respect? Okay. Yeah. So we've got about, I think, as Rob mentioned, we've got about 9 million U.S. in the bank. We had a capital raise six months ago. We had some of the warrants come in that were in the money, and we had a significant profit from the sale of Uranium. So we're well-cached up at this point for what our plans are in the near future. Our share structure, we have an outstanding around 40, some million shares of stock. Don't need to dilute in the near future. We've got plenty of cash to do what we're doing and enough cash to get into a cash flow. We've also got revenue from our oil and gas royalties, which is not insignificant, comes in each month. You can look at those quantities on our press releases and the range of $40,000 to $50,000 a month for a small company like us. That's a fairly significant amount. Looks like it's going to go forward with oil and gas prices staying high, and the demand for oil and gas going to continue. So we're in a very good cash position. We don't need to raise any more money in the near future. We can go into production and start cash flowing from our production of Uranium and Benadium. Well, it comes across as a very strong story with a tight share structure, money in the bank, no need to raise. Basically, the trigger for really going into more extensive operations is what? Just higher Uranium prices based on just other market conditions. Is that what you're looking for? Well, obviously, we could make money at today's prices, but the reason is you probably could make a lot more money at what's projected to be the price in the next two years. So there's no reason for us to dilute our resource base by producing and selling Uranium, say at $50, because we don't need to right now. And I think for the good of the shareholders, the resources should be held and sold at the highest possible price, which generates the highest cash flows for the company. This company will be valued in the next few years based on our significant cash flows, and that'll be based on higher Uranium prices and probably stable Benadium prices. Benadium goes up and down, but we think Benadium also will be a driver of cash flows for this company. Yeah, I mean, we didn't even mention Benadium. I mean, it's used in steel making and alloying, and then there's a whole another angle on Benadium Redox batteries for utility scale power storage. Boy, we could talk about this all day, but we don't have all day, and we're supposed to keep them short and focused so that the listeners and their viewers out there don't drift off. But to the viewers and listeners out there, the name is Western Uranium and Benadium. They're traded in Canada and on the US OTC. We have George Glaser again with us today. And George, we thank you for your time, and we wish you well in everything that you do. Thank you, sir.