If I may, think of this in the traditional metals supply-and-demand cycle. As the Chinese exports decreased, metal prices spiked, and interest in the technology went through the roof. That has all kind of moderated a little bit within the last year or two, but I believe that there is a very real race to be in that early-stage production. As it becomes obvious that companies outside of China are going to be successful producing these materials, the prices will start to tailor back, and the opportunity to develop an economic investment or a hugely successful economic investment in the country will be delayed many years and will respond, as it is delayed, with a much thinner margin and a much tougher success rate.
I think we have the need to exploit the fact that we have the resources and we have the skills. You asked about the speed with which other companies are developing. The reality is that most of those companies outside of China are actually coming to Canada for the early-stage process development already. We need to be positioned to take the back-end process development effectively and to focus on some of our local project opportunities to truly win the marketplace there.