It makes us wary, for sure, of investing in a brand new mine that would produce rare earths, because of that level of volatility. This is why we have looked at being creative and looked at what rare earths sit within our ore bodies today and whether we can extract them already.
Fundamentally, the main metal or mineral we are extracting in our mines today is what keeps the mine going and surviving, and it has that low-cost position. Basically, we are creating the extraction of these additional rare earths within a fundamentally stable business. That's the way we can guard against that.
You raise a very interesting point: Is there something that governments can do to create stability of price and stability of demand, given that these minerals are so critical for countries?
For example, Canada, the U.S. and Australia are working together in the critical mineral space to try to create a sort of geopolitical stability in supply, an indigenous supply of critical minerals. Is there something that governments can do to create this stability and encourage and favour more indigenous production of these critical minerals going forward?