 Hi, this is Jack Lifton, and today I'm speaking with Gabriel Pindar, who I believe is the CEO of Neil Lithium. C-O-O. Excuse me, C-O-O, Chief Operating Officer of Neil Lithium, which I think is one of the very best junior Lithium companies. In other words, I'm sure it's going to come into production, which leads me to my question. Gabriel, in the automotive industry, the first new car off an assembly line is called Job 1. Can I ask you when Kilogram 1 of commercial material will be coming from Neil Lithium? That's a good question, actually. We are aiming for last quarter 2023 today. What is your target production? 20,000 tonnes per year. Of? Lithium carbonate. Okay, and at that point in time, you would reach full target production in what year, when? Roughly 12 to 14 months later, you will be at full production. Sometime in 2025. 20, yeah, correct, 24. And what do you think at that point will be the market price for Lithium carbonate? Well, hard to say, but there is an incredible demand curve at the moment, so I will expect that to be still north of today's price, so north of 14,000 for sure. And your cost of producing the material is what? Just below $3,000 a ton. So you're predicting that you would make $11,000 a ton profit, yes? On 20,000 tonnes a year. Well, I take my shoes off to count that high. That's a big number. Neil Lithium is, I believe, a brine mine, so to speak. Correct, correct. What is the life of that deposit? 20,000 tonnes a year. Yes, so the pre-feasibility, when we published the pre-feasibility study, the resource was not fully defined. So we published an update two weeks ago, I think, and that resource increased considerably, particularly the measure and indicated. Now we have material, at the PFS we have material for 35 years. And now that sort of has increased by 135%. So you could extrapolate and say we have material for more than 70 years or like 100 years. So normally what you do in these cases is that you start targeting larger production, really. And you have agreements or do you have any take or pay agreements or do you have any actual sales ahead? No, we have signed CATL as one of the shareholders and we are reserving that discussion for the time that we finish the feasibility study. Okay, and when will that be? In the next three months, let's say. What capital costs do you have from now until full production? Around $320 million is what we estimated. Do you see any problem in raising that money? No, I don't think so. I think the market, it has turned in the last six months, eight months, so it has turned. So I think it's a favorable market. And I think for companies that can demonstrate the work that we have done, I think we will find the finance with no problems. You have a very good deposit. I've looked into it in great detail. In general, for a non-technical audience, what technology are you using to recover the lithium? In general, we use just normally evaporative technology. So very, very few reagents. Our chemical team has been perfecting that process and we have demonstrated that it works through four years of piloting in the ponds and two and a half years of piloting in a piloting plant. So we're very happy with the process. It's a process that saves a lot of reagents and it's a process that saves a lot of water too. So we will be able to publish the numbers now when we have the final feasibility and you'll be surprised. It's a very, very smart process. Okay, I look forward to being surprised. Thank you for bringing us up to date. And I just don't see any negative side here for your project because as I said, my opinion is that the lithium market is a permanent bull market at this point. Yeah, look, we think the same. So we have the right market. We have been doing the right work behind the asset. And I think we are at the time that we can show all of the work that we have done to the potential shareholders and investors and let them evaluate if they like it or not. Thank you again for taking the time to talk to me today. Thank you, Jack. Thank you for having us. Thank you.