 Hi, I'm Chris Thompson for Investor Intel, and today I'm with Jamie Tuer from Fjordland Exploration. How are you today, Jamie? Excellent. Thanks very much for having me, Chris. So Fjordland focuses on Canadian projects, and maybe you can just outline for some investors who may not know your company, what projects you're working on these days. So we have three projects in three different provinces in Canada, west to east. We have BC, Mt. Milligan project. We have Quebec. We have the Renzi project, which is an old nickel mine. And in Labrador, on the far side of the country, we have the South Voise Bay project, which is a nickel project. So it seems that you're focusing on battery metals, is that correct? Fully battery metals. It's copper, nickel, graphite, lithium. And your number one project is the Voise Bay project? The most advanced is the South Voise Bay project. It's had historically probably $30 or $40 million spent on it. It's the right terrain, it's the same terrain as the Voise Bay nickel mine, which has over 2% nickel in it, run by valet. Our rock is the same age. We're looking at areas that have not been drilled to the extent that it should be drilled. But historically, there was 12% nickel in some of the drill holes, and almost every hole has nickel in it. That's high grade nickel. And who are you partnering with there? We're partnering with Robert Freeland's company, Ivanhoe Electric. They have the right to earn in a 65% share by spending an additional $4 million this year or into next year. If they don't spend it, they have zero interest, and we still retain our 75% interest. So it's a very valuable asset for us. And this needs to be a little bit of activity at your Renzi project. What's going on there? Well, Renzi, it's an old mine. It's a 1.5% combined nickel copper mine that ran in the late 60s, early 70s. It was shut down. There's probably, but there's still probably 500,000 tons of ore left in the lake itself. We're looking for other deposits outside around it so that we could build that up to the 2 plus million ton range. We've flown it with EM in the past, and we're looking at soil sampling to find other targets. That's a matter of following up with drilling on those. And what are a couple of the other projects you have that you're working on? So interestingly enough, with the Renzi deposit when we drilled it last year, we had a wide intercepts of graphite in two of the holes, and they measure up to eight kilometers with the geophysics. So we have a lot of targets. We think it'll outcrop its surface. We're going to collect that material this summer and process it. We've done some work at SGS, Lakefield. We know we can upgrade it to around 95% carbon right now. I think we need more grade, but if we look at some of the other graphite projects in the area, it's totally doable, and Quebec's great from a graphite point of view. The other project we're looking on from that point of view in Quebec is Lithium. We recently staked some ground, which was denoted on old maps that we found that were white pegmatites. The Lithium and Quebec are all hosted in white pegmatites, the spodumene. These maps were never digitized that we could see on the Quebec database, and they're left there open. There's high Lithium in the lake bottom sediments and government surveys down ice. So we think it's a great target, and I guess we're going to jump on that Lithium bandwagon a little bit. But I don't just jump on for no reason. I think there's a really good opportunity there. But the focus is there, though, on battery metals. Absolutely. Fully battery metals. I mean, I think from an ESG point of view, to get mines into production, this is the type of commodity that we can get, you know, licensed for when it comes to building mines. And is there a reason why all your projects are in Canada? No. I've looked at other areas, but historically we were a Canadian-focused company. But also, it's corporate governance, and it's the ability... It's one of those things where you have to have the licensed operator. We know we can put mines into production in Canada. There's other places. I worked in Greenland for a long time and built a mine there, and I know I could go back there. I'm looking, but right now we're focusing Canada. So for investors who are looking at your company for this year, what sort of news releases can they expect? What sort of activity, the things you're working on for the different projects? Activity will be... We're waiting for budget meetings to conclude with Ivanhoe Electric, whether they'll fund a $4 million drilling program this year. We're looking at advancing our Renzi project. We're looking at potentially a gravity survey. Nickel is associated with dense gravity anomalies. We're looking at that. We're looking obviously at following up the Lithium project, and we're looking at NBC. We've just been granted a five-year exploration permit, which will allow us to drill, so we have to get in on the ground there. That project actually had historically a gram per ton of gold along with copper in a trench, which, again, is not publicly known. It's in the records, but not widely known. So there's another example of doing a little digging and then getting in the field to follow these things up. Literally and metaphorically, yes. You'll be digging into your... Good. So for this, for when investors are looking at your company, there's a lot of activity in the battery metal space, and you should have a lot of... You're doing any drilling at all? And also from a budget standpoint, how are you handling it? It would be a substantial drill program in Labrador, not funded by us. And then at Renzi, potentially, we have drill targets. We want to follow them up. We want to be a bit more careful as to how we target our drilling. It's complicated area. But the V-TEM survey, the electromagnetic survey from last year gave us some great targets. Well, thanks for your time today. I'm Chris Thompson for Investor Intel, and we were speaking with Jamie Tuer from Fjordland Exploration.