 Today I have the pleasure of speaking with Merrick Smith from Alphabet. How are you today? Hi Tracy, I'm very well. Thank you for having me. Well, I'll tell you, your news that you just put out this week is extraordinary. Your record Q3, EBITDA, a 53.7 million, and your debt-debt free position. Let's start there. Tracy, very pleasing results. For us, what is important is to deliver and to deliver consistently. Our first mine, which is the Palmer North mine, is certainly performing, and that performance on the back of a rising tin price speaks wonders in terms of profitability and cash flow generation. There's cash flow generation, and then there is, in my humble opinion, miracles. Can you talk to us a little bit more about this, how you became net debt free? Because you basically just talked to us about this. I think anyone out there at Investor Intel should read your news release and read how you have done this. It's quite extraordinary. So Tracy, our production levels increased in Q3 2021. Just below where we want to be on a sustainable basis. We'd like to see around 12,000 tons of content in a year, which is 3,000 tons a quarter, and we came in just below that. Now that uplift in production together with a 20% higher tin price resulted in a $53 million EBITDA level. Now the conversion of our EBITDA to cash flow is very relevant and quite interesting. You would have noted that our net debt position reduced from $30 million down to a net cash position of $1 million. So just over $30 million of cash flow generation against a $53 million EBITDA level is very pleasing. For us, at the end of the day, it's all about cash. Profits need to be converted to cash and we successfully did that in Q3. And of course, tin being a critical material, they're being a rising demand for tin. That's all extraordinary. However, I want to stay on your earnings for just a minute. According to your results and some of the coverage that I've reviewed, you're looking at doing a dividend in 2022 for investors. Is that correct? Basically, our board will need to discuss our dividend policy towards the end of this year. We would like to see a distribution to Shell. Our Shell is having invested in this new Elfman mine. Certainly, our investors look forward to the blue sky potential and us allocating capital towards our growth initiatives. But we would also like to see a bit of a balance in also distributing cash to our Shell. So that will be a topic for discussion towards the end of this year and we would like to do that as soon as possible subject to board approval. And of course, in addition to your outstanding earnings, can you talk to us about tin in general and what is happening in the market? I'm sure there's people on Investor Intel going, hey, maybe it's just a spike in the price, but there's actually a global shortage. There is a shortage of tin at the moment, Tracy. From a demand perspective, tin is all about solder, which is the glue that holds our technology and circuit boards together. And that goes to the growth in the electronics industry and it goes to growth in green energy and the like. So demand for tin is on the up. There's quite a significant tailwind with regards to that. And then when one looks at supplier, as you well know, mines don't get built and commissioned in two, three, four, five or seven years. It takes more than a decade for a feasible deposit to be financed up to be built and to ultimately produce. So supply is constrained, limited investment in exploration in tin over the last few decades, which is contributing to the issue. So for the medium term, we certainly are seeing a deficit in the tin market and robust demand going forward. And what really excites us is that Alffman is very well positioned to capitalize on its growth potential and ultimately fill a substantial portion of the supply gap going forward. Well, there's lots of things to be excited about. In addition to your outstanding Q3 results, you also announced a drilling update here just the week before last. Can you talk to us about your drilling plan action here? So Tracy, when Alffman embarked upon the development of the Basia and Parma Northmine, certainly back then, we acknowledged that the potential of Alffman exceeds what Parma North is all about. It was important for us to prove up the starter mine, which is Parma North, which is now very significant in terms of global tin production. I mean, we are currently producing 4% of the world's mine tin, so that's very significant. But ultimately, our licensed area covers a highly prospective ridge over 13 kilometers. And the results of having now drilled a substantial portion of the next order deposit confirms our thesis that this ridge is highly mineralized. And if we consider the outcomes of our various geological work over the past two years, and we compare the signature of our current mine and Parma South to other targets further down south, certainly these signatures are being repeated. So we are very positive that there's potentially another Parma North and another Parma South and possibly two or three or four more down south on the Basia ridge. All the tax is more drilling and certainly we are generating cash flow to fund exactly that. Well, your results are stupendous. Thank you so much for joining us today, Maritz, and what I would really love if you'll just, I'm going to put you on the spot here. If I could get you, Jack Lipton and Christopher Eccleston to discuss tin as the real critical material. Absolutely. Looking forward to that. Thank you.