Thanks, Billy. So outstanding. So I am going to wrap up the last segment before we go to questions. With the business outlook for 2025, maybe a little bit 2026. All of our 2025 outlook objectives, by the way, are also detailed in the 10-K that we just filed. Which, by the way, we also finalized the audit. By the way, we got a clean opinion. You can all see that now. You know, with the on the EDGAR. But let me start with metals. So Comstock Metals has now been operating its first commercial demonstration facility for nearly a full year. We validated all critical parameters intake revenues, tipping fees, intake revenues or tipping fees as many people call them. Are slightly above expectation. That is thrilling to me because I was worried two, three years ago about what that was all about. At over $500 a ton. Offtake revenues, which we initially planned for nearly zero. Are remarkably positive at $250 a ton. Primarily because we were able to produce 100% of the materials for reuse and resale. And we continue to experience strong silver concentrations in these tailings. So it is silver-rich tailings. Silver grades would make any Comstock miner proud. I mean, they are big numbers. So costs are looking great too. At about $200 a ton all in. When you think about a 75% you could push 80%. You know, operating margin is an extraordinarily good place to start. But our success in this business starts with speed. A panel every seven seconds. That enables scale 3.3 million panels per year from one line. That translates to 100,000 tons per year. And then the last variable speed scale, location. Our first facilities are wonderfully located in Silver Springs, Nevada. Which is one truck day away from eight different states and importantly, in the immediate proximity of California and Arizona. We are with Nevada most of the country's end-of-life panels reside today. We will scale this up now in two phases. And spend $6 million this year with our plus our permits so that we have our first large-scale facility up and running in 2026. It is mind-boggling that you could be breakeven or cash positive in a facility that is only doing, like, a thousand tons. Or two thousand tons. It is the nature of this business model. Very, very low variable costs. Very, very fast throughput processing speed. Very low CapEx. So $6 million this year starts us at 50,000 tons, and we can double that capacity quickly, efficiently. As soon as we are capturing enough of the market for that existing capacity, 50,000 tons, and the numbers are ramping up fast, then we will expand it. And I can tell you that we are off to a very, very good start. Last year, our first year of commissioning, we billed over half a million in total revenue just right out of the shoot. It is all demonstration scale, a lot of trials, a lot of different types of panels. But the outlook for this year, as Billy is just saying, is five times larger or over $2.5 million billed as our largest customers are now coming online and the business is rapidly growing. So during, you know, during when we were starting this thing, when we pivoted, people thought we were crazy. We starting this thing up. Are you going to be able to get customers? Are you going to be able to lock up enough customers? You are going to be able to do this. You are going to be able to do that. The team has done it. So during 2025, precisely our objectives are as follows. We are going to maximize three shifts. Even though it is a demonstration scale, we are going to run it full. You know, I will give you some insight. You know, our customers want those panels destroyed as fast as possible so they can get their certificates of destruction. We are doing them an environmental service. You know, and revenue from the demonstration facility will keep flowing. We are also going to secure that project-level funding. Right? Where Taryn this is a Comstock playbook. We are tearing the same page out that Fuels is using for a series A type financing, you know, so that we can scale up the next two large Nevada-based sites. We will complete our permitting on our first site in Silver Springs and land these equipments all by December. So fuels have much higher revenue, more and more high-profile customers and the permitting in place, once approved, versus scaling it all up. Let me turn to fuels. Our 2025 objective is closing on the series A by Q2. It is coming fast. This analogy of opening the gates for the horse race is absolutely what happened when we announced the first tranche of Marathon. We will complete the site selection for the first project, the first refinery in Oklahoma. In Q2 as well. It is coming quickly. Once selected, we will start integrating a local hexas-based fuel farm into that first refinery. We have already done extensive planning. With the HEXIS team on that. We will also secure sufficient project-level financing for that refinery. This is not the same thing as the series A. We fielded a lot of questions on this. The series A, to be clear, relieves the parent of having to fund fuels. It allows fuels to be funded on a standalone basis. And depending on how much we close it out at, for two to three years. That is a huge relief to the parent. In terms of uses of cash. But and that is necessary for fuels to stand alone for fuels to drive everything that it is doing. But it is not sufficient for building the facility. The project financing will allow us to build an emission that first facility. We have said repeatedly that is over $200 million for the first facility. Obviously, we got a great head start. Because the project funding certainly includes the $142 million bond allocation, that we received and we are planning to place for that specific facility. And we have multiple outstanding bankers bulge bracket, and the like. Working with us on this right now, full time, we also plan, as we said, a couple of times already, on integrating and expanding the new Madison facility with the Wausau facility to bring our pilot production capabilities up to two barrels a day. And lastly, we will most certainly be executing additional revenue-generating commercial agreements from both pure licensees like you have already seen internationally, 6% engineering fee, 6% royalty, 20% equity stakes. But there is more than that. We are not just building our own facilities. We are not just licensing our technologies and taking equity stakes in those things as well. But there is a hybrid which is resulting from more immediate integrations with existing companies. We are now being lobbied by pulp and paper mills. By sugarcane mills, and with our feedstock, Evolution we are even seeing a massive opportunity in corn ethanol. Think about it. Pure corn is much much more expensive. Than xano grass. Corn has a significantly higher carbon impact score than xanograss. Xanograss and or other woody biomasses as waste result in higher revenue for the ethanol even though it is molecularly identical. Simply because of the feedstock model that we are enabling. And if that was all it was, we could revolutionize corn ethanol. But that is not all it is because corn does not have the lignin content to be able to produce biolum and double and triple the yields. So if you are a corn ethanol producer listening to the call, you probably already know David Winston's number. Just give him a call. Our solutions in Feedstock can now quickly enhance those operations. We see these as additional and very large segments of the market. Well, Corrado, why have not you guys talked about this before? Because you would have to go chase Feedstock to enable these things. Hexus transforms the game of the feedstock model. So these are very large segments that we can now more readily integrate our solution into and monetize. All of this establishes a platform, an unprecedented platform for us to meet half, just half, of the US mandate. If we can reach half of the US mandate, from the renewable fuel standards for advanced biofuels, we would be producing 200 million barrels of fuel per year. That translates to over 8 billion gallons by 2035. 8 billion gallons is half a 16 billion gallon mandate. The US market does not burn 16 billion new gallons a year. It burns 240 billion gallons a year. So these mandates are a fraction of a fraction of the market. And if we just take half of that fraction of a fraction, the game is over. And remember, all of those numbers are just the United States. So we got a lot done in 2024. Was hard.