Thank you. That was an excellent summary, by the way, of the industry I'm in. I can't disagree with anything you said. I've had the pleasure of going to the White House a couple of times to discuss some of these very issues on cobalt and national security.
What I find fascinating here by way of an opportunity is that we have an auto industry, we have a mining industry, but it's this mid-section we're talking about, the chemical processing. It's not just the chemical processing that we're in; it's then the beneficiation of those chemicals into a precursor, and into a cathode, before it gets into the cell. These billion-dollar investments—$2.5 billion for SK in Georgia, $2.3 billion with GM and LG in Tennessee—are still at the assembly level. They're building cells. They're building battery packs. The window is still there for us.
I think your approach, sir, of collaboration is an important one. I think it's going to take some big players. I think we need to open our doors to foreign investors. The players like us that are coming in and starting the train, if you will, do need some bigger shoes to help us out, to try to connect that work. That's where I would start.
In terms of the permitting process—and I did it in B.C. with the Kemess mine, and now I'm doing it with the refinery—this idea of a one-window where, as an industry person, my team gets to interface with a point person, is really helpful, because we can't navigate very well.
Thank you for the question.