Thanks, Mark. First, I would like to thank our team for the hard work and effort they put in to position our business going into 2023 and also prepare our business to be more resilient across all of our platforms. As we mentioned earlier, 2022 revenue of $39.5 million increased more than 400% year-over-year as we accelerated our carbon production. While achieving this record sale for us, our ReElement Technology division in commercializing our leading clinical – we accomplished this while also our ReElement Technology division commercialized our leading, world-leading critical mineral refining technology. Having the team in place to be able to accomplish the growth of the carbon industry, while also developing and building out and commercializing ReElement is a key factor for our business and our focus going forward. The majority of our revenue was generated from our McCoy Elkhorn complex. This was offset by the idling of our Perry County Resources Complex, which we will discuss later. At no point in our history has our business been better positioned to serve the markets we operate in and to capitalize on the broad asset base and our talent and our ability to produce, process and refine raw materials that are in very high demand across all of our platforms. Given our execution, we are extremely excited about the opportunities for both entities we have in front of us. I’d also believe that the enterprise value as a whole is currently a substantial discount relative to some of the parts or comparable to peer valuations. Let’s dive into each division. So American Carbon, our mining division, we have spent a significant amount of time in the fourth quarter, but also in the first quarter evaluating what generates the most return for our investors. And we have setup a strategic plan to not only be able to execute upon this plan, but also to evaluate the opportunities to monetize certain assets. Over the course of the last 3 months, Tarlis Thompson has done a phenomenal job of stepping up and running this division in assistance with Joel Stanley setting up a plan for this business to make money and generate substantial value for our investors focusing on the highest value assets that we have, while also not chasing golden divisions out there. And I think the strategy that they put in front of us, which we can talk about here, is important for us. The carbon side of this division needs to focus on making money and driving fundamental value in the lowest risk possible scenario for our investors. From our perspective, the outlook for met carbon looks extremely strong with China coming back online following their zero-COVID related shutdowns and you are starting to see the world open back up and including the U.S market with two new blast furnaces opening up in the last few months. Now, this will take time for it to trickle through, but net carbon prices are still at very, very attractive levels and we are starting to see the transportation and logistics bottlenecks hit, but also open backup which will drive revenue and drive value. The supply for high-quality met carbon remains constrained. There is not a lot of new investment going into the space. A lot of the existing mines within the space are old legacy mines that are producing higher cost structures. We have made substantial investment into our complexes to position them for one, low-cost production, but two, long-term production, including some investments we made in the fourth quarter, which resulted in substantial downtime of expanding the mines and positioning the mines and then also in the first quarter of setting up the mines for the long-term growth, including adding the second section at Carnegie 2 which will be talked about here going forward as well. We remain steadfast on monetizing our carbon assets now that could be through joint ventures that could be through sales and/or monetizing the growth and cash flow from the operations versus focusing on aggressive growth. We believe that we have opportunities for substantial growth by monetizing existing assets and relocating assets. Our Perry County Resources Complex, we idled for most of the second half of 2022, this is a large complex that was hit hard by the floods and the region and the workforce in that area has been somewhat limited. Now, I think that’s opening back up pretty substantially. That being said, our focus for Perry County at the current moment in time is not to put that back into production. We are focusing – we have substantial amount of assets over there. We have substantial amount of value over there. And we believe the value of our assets would result in about $40 million in value to our business, the equipment, the infrastructure that we put into it and the ability to relocate that equipment and infrastructure to other mines. Now, we also are evaluating offers on the complex to potentially sell it. We believe that the cash today would be very accretive to the business if somebody would offer a value that is commensurate with what we are willing to sell it for. That being said a substantial amount of these assets, we believe would be very accretive to our Wyoming County Complex and relocating these assets to Wyoming County to maximize and de-risk the Wyoming County and expedite the production in Wyoming County in extremely accretive way. Wyoming County is a mid-wall complex, with also a very, very high quality high-vol A mine in the same complex with the processing plant and rail load-out facility onsite. As we pursue our tax-exempt bond and waiting for the markets to stabilize within the bond industry, we believe we can advance this project forward faster, better and stronger by utilizing existing assets that we have by relocating them in a very accretive way by bringing over $40 million of value there. The net value we believe post-reclamation if we go to that at Perry County would be approximately $35 million in value of our business and based on our opinion. Upon evaluating several opportunities, we are not sitting on our hands. We made the decision to deploy certain assets also to our McCoy Elkhorn complex and support the embedded organic growth there. McCoy Elkhorn as a complex is an extremely high value complex. We put the value of our carbon business on McCoy and Wyoming County. We have invested into expanding the McCoy complex by adding a second section at Carnegie 2. These three sections we have running at the Carnegie mines are one, accretive and very high margin complexes for us now that we have went through the development, spent the development over the last 6 months, and positioned these mines for growth and the ability to add another section at our Carnegie 1 mine as well as looking at our Carnegie 3 mine down the road without having to spend substantial CapEx. Our focus, as I said earlier, is about generating cash and we are positioned to do that going forward. The mines and the production capacity and the production run-rate that our men have hit would enable us to hit that growth and to be profitable going forward based on the production we are currently achieving right now. One thing we have realized on our carbon complex we need to control our own destiny. We have relied upon in the fourth quarter and the first quarter we relied upon our one of our customers’ processing plants and it struggled. They had trouble moving product and they had trouble getting product to their processing plants. So, we made the decision. Our team on the ground made the decision to bring our state-of-the-art processing plant back online. At the time when we started the mine, it didn’t – there was no need to do that and what we realized we needed to going forward. Now we control our own destiny. We had the ability to diversify our customer base and we have the ability to monetize and maximize the margins within our product by now operating our current – our processing capacity, which is a state-of-the-art plant with long life empowerment. And we are showcasing that now. The processing plant is up and running. We are able to start monetizing the inventories on the ground and setting ourselves up for a record second quarter. As I stated earlier, we will continually evaluate all of our mining complex, our Deane mining complex have started production. The team over there is running. They are hitting strides. They are setup for growth. And we are excited that they have been able to get that mine into production, which would ultimately generate cash flow streams for the business in itself. We are looking at monetizing other assets we have as well, including the Perry County Complex if somebody is willing to pay the commensurate value for it. But we believe with the Wyoming County Complex going online, those assets and that value would have to be commensurate with that $35 million to $40 million in value that we believe will generate by bringing that to the Wyoming County Complex. To help facilitate the start of the processing plant, we also stockpiled over $6 million worth of net carbon over at our McCoy Elkhorn complex. That is revenue and cash flow that we will be able to realize here in the next few months, next few weeks actually, now that the processing plant is up and running and is hitting its stride and doing well. The sequential decline in top line revenue growth in the fourth quarter of 2022 was partially due to us beginning to stockpile production and given our plans to restart our own processing plants as well as expand our mines to position them for future cash flow. At the end of the day, certain mines need to be run at scale. Thankfully, our Carnegie mines are smaller. They don’t need huge production. And they are able to run very efficiently. Now with two sections, the margins and the margin expansion we get doing that will be showcased here very shortly and we are already starting to realize the benefit of that internally. McCoy Elkhorn continues to be our biggest contributor and our growth engine for American Carbon. Now that we have two operating sections at Carnegie 2, we are looking at adding a second operating section to Carnegie 1. And then looking at our other mines that can be brought online with minimal CapEx given we already have our processing plant up and running and the ability to produce specialty products for the specialty sulfur market, specialty carbon market, but evaluating our Carnegie 3 mine, Mine 17, Mine 15A as well as surface mines we have in the region that won’t take a lot of CapEx to get up and running and further expand the revenue base. Our platform is unique given the significant mining infrastructure that we own and ultimately adds a lot of value and the quality of the carbon that we produce and have access to the restructuring efforts and the investments that we made to streamline clean up environmental liabilities left behind by the legacy companies and position this business as a high margin, high-growth asset is exactly where we are at today. And we are starting to see the production coming out of the Carnegie mines which are two very high quality mines that are very mineable to showcase the revenue growth that we can achieve from exceeding revenue that we did last year in a pretty meaningful way. Additionally, we remain focused on progressing our Wyoming County Complex over the next year. As recently communicated, we continue to work through the process for the $45 million tax-exempt bond to the state of West Virginia that is preliminary been approved for. The credit markets are seeing some stabilization following a very aggressive interest rate policy from the Federal Reserve as well as the allocation commitment to totaling $4.9 million of the federal new market tax credits. Now with the interest rate stability, we have also seen on stability within the banking environment. And so right now, our team that’s working on the tax-exempt bond is doing a phenomenal job of navigating the current market environment. And we are also advancing the project forward and relocating assets there which is just further reducing the risk, not only for us and our investors, but also for our tax-exempt bond investors by offsetting the costs that would be required out of the new capital coming in with existing equipment and infrastructure that we already possess within our business. We can de-risk this and expedite the production to bring this mine on – these mines on very quickly and at nice margins right off the bat. And we are excited about the developments and the progress we are making and the planning that we are making in that complex to get that that mine – that complex online. With the issuance of two non-dilutive capital sources, we are excited to showcase how we positioned the complex to be the first of its kind advanced carbon and rare earth processing facility by combining premium mid-vol met carbon production with unique rare earth capture process technology, utilizing electrolysis onsite to treat your water and your waste material coming off your plant, and then further capturing and monetizing byproducts that are coming off of that is the first of its kind and a unique structure that a low cost structure by utilizing the processing capacity to generate the rare earth elements. It’s not a standalone rare earth element recycling facility or processing facility, it’s a fully integrated coal processing facility capturing your water streams coming off there. We are excited to showcase that in the next year as we get this complex further advanced. Lastly, we will also explore leasing opportunities of our other idle assets. And similar to our structure we have done with our Deane mining complex, of which they have started production recently, we will continue to explore opportunities to monetize additional assets and support the existing production that we have in our existing team that’s running our mines to be the most profitable and the most accretive to our investor base. To expand a little bit on the ReElement Technologies division that Mark just made, we have never been involved with an entity that is as exciting or to the higher ceiling than ReElement does. Looking at it where you see a lot of the companies within the battery recycling space, there is nobody that’s fully integrated from the battery to the magnet. Our technology developed out of Purdue University sponsored by Eli Lilly through decades of research and investment is revolutionary. One we can process lithium ores at dollars per kilogram, very efficiently, very effectively localized processing as well as the ability to co-locate at existing battery manufacturing sites to help offset their costs, make it truly a more circular economy and a more efficient and optimized economy. Our technology can do that where hydromet cannot. Hydromet is multi hundreds of millions of dollar investment, years and months of planning where our technology takes months of permitting and fractions of the dollars to invest, which gives us the opportunity to grab market share and showcase them. We have had numerous calls with parties, new battery manufacturing plants popping up throughout the United States and we are excited to continue to advance those discussions forward contracts for our investors. We are also continually entering into additional pilot and partnership programs with some very exciting companies out there that provide different feedstocks, anything from end of life magnets to different chemistry to batteries as well as the lithium ores. Currently today, the opportunity is very attractive for us to continue to expand this division and partner with some of our existing partners such as USA Earth, which is standing up one of the largest magnet manufacturing facilities in the United States. And we are excited to see their growth as well as AML, the magnet manufacturer in Florida, which is doing a phenomenal job of commercializing their technology and expanding their technology. With regards to the natural occurring lithium refining, we believe our technology is game changer. We can process at the local level, we can cut out the logistics costs, we can cut out the need for transporting lithium spodumene, which is a 94% rock material halfway across the country to be processed using heavy chemicals and solvent extraction. We can process it locally. And given that unique technology has enabled us to enter into numerous partnerships and MOUs and conversations within the African environment, one of the most resource richest nations, accessing the ports where we are currently in discussions of building and refining facilities on the West Coast of Africa as well as on the East Coast of Africa to be able to access the lithium reserves and the current lithium production that is being exported in raw form bringing that value set to the African community bringing in partners within the African community that are on a world stage in terms of their knowledge as well as their experience. Opportunities like this further exemplify the unique attributes of the ReElement refining platform in terms of its feedstock from chemistries and ability to grow. Ability to be efficiently deployed due to modular design and environmental sensitivity is something that is not existed in this industry and something we are bringing to this industry. We are thankful for the team that we have been able to put in place every element and the team that we continue to expand upon. We brought Bob Galyen on as a board member and Bob’s team in itself are first class. He was the number two employee at CATL, the Chief Technology Officer. He helped build that business from the ground up and he is helping us do the same. He is extremely valuable and the people that he is working with and his team that he works with are phenomenal. And we are excited to have them on board and we are excited to further expand that talent pool which we will be talking about here in the next few months – next few weeks. We are seeing numerous opportunities in the recycling space beyond what we have announced with our magnet partners. And we are seeing those opportunities for both magnets and batteries in localized regions. We have also commenced several pilot programs to recycle these critical minerals from feedstocks such as consumer power tools, wind turbines, black mass producers, battery manufacturers as well as industrial battery sources on energy storage platforms, which is predominantly LFP chemistries, which would not have been very challenging to recycle using traditional legacy technologies very cost effectively to recycle utilizing our technology. In terms of recycling, I think it’s worth reiterating how we strategically positioned our value-added partners in addressing our sustainability needs. Our flexibility in refining technology does not require massive CapEx. It does not require a hub-and-spoke model. We can recycle at the local level. We can recycle at the source. We are not transporting dangerous battery materials across highways. We can recycle it locally reducing the risk profile not only for us, but also for our customers and the community. The innovative and economic process that we utilized has a payback period of less than 3 years and often on projects less than 2 years, which is unheard of in the battery recycling space. In regards to the realm of spin-off, you will see that we filed a Form 10. We are working with the SEC through the review process of that. We are excited about the progress that we are making. This business deserves to be its own public company. It doesn’t fit within the platform of a mining operation on the coal side to a green energy recycling platform using the most environmentally sensitive technologies. We have the teams in place to be able to manage that process and operate these businesses post spin-off so that they can both be very successful businesses in their own right. I would like to give a shout out and recognize our ReElement team for the groundbreaking stuff they have achieved. Being able to produce 99.99% purity products is a game changer. That is ultimately what has separated us from our peers but also being able to do that cost effectively. We believe we put together a team that is not only entrepreneurial, but also has the history of success in operating big industrial facilities and will be able to drive this business forward very profitably and very efficiently for our investors. We will continue to add top talent, interviewing top talent daily from within the industry as well as outside the industry and bringing them in from a technical perspective, which we believe will have the world’s best chromatography experts and team behind our ReElement division, whether it’s with university partners at Purdue as well as engineering teams and longstanding success developing the technology and operating such as Eli Lilly and Dr. Yi Bing, that’s joined our team internally as well as our Chief Commercial Officer who joined us recently has done a phenomenal job, Chris Moorman. Our technical advisors, as I referenced, Bob Galyen as well as a few others, which we will announce here shortly will continue to position ReElement as a global refining leader and the entity that will deliver significant value to our shareholders as well as a goal to build ReElement into a multibillion dollar business by executing upon the need for recycling not only in batteries, but also in magnets. Battery recycling and what was mentioned earlier in this call is probably good segment our American Metals division and I will keep this relatively short. American Metals has predominantly been a ferrous metal recycler for us as we reclaimed legacy mining operations that were no longer viable in the current market environment. As we have continued to expand our business and to keep ReElement as a pure-play refining division, we are in the process of developing American Metals into a world-class shredding operation, the ability to not only shred end-of-life batteries very efficiently and safely and working with the leading industry partner to help ensure that we are the standard for battery shredding in a safe way to reduce the combustible events that take place in the battery shredding as well as being able to shred magnets and shred the products that magnets come with it. We have developed a process that can efficiently and effectively recycle rare earth magnets in a cost effective way extract the magnets out of what they come in, which would be a motor or a rotor or a wind turbine and extract them very cost effectively to be recycled back to high purity magnet grade materials today. The ability to do that within American Metals will enable us to keep ReElement as a pure-play refiner, which will not compete against our other customer bases that provide us end-of-life products already today, but also enable us to capitalize on the ability to take both not only magnets and batteries from our partners that want us to recycle these materials to get them back into the circular economy. As such, we believe American metals is a great platform to leverage ReElement’s refining capacity, be able to produce products that we can then deliver to ReElement to be able to efficiently and effectively expand our revenue base. In closing, we remain very confident in the position of all of our assets and the long-term value they provide to our investors. We remain hyper-focused on unlocking value and have already communicated our initial strategic steps to do so. With ample liquidity and do not perceive us needing to issue equity to raise cash, especially as we – especially some of the sources of non-dilutive capital we have. We also feel very good about the current production levels at the mines themselves. From Carnegie 1 to Carnegie 2, we believe based on the roughly 30,000 run-rate of tons of production would put us in a highly profitable state month over month going into the second quarter and for the rest of the year and for the next 10 to 15 years for that matter. Just to reiterate, as the largest shareholder of American Resources, our management team is committed to maximizing the value for all of our shareholders. And we believe continued execution and splitting the ReElement divisions are the early steps in doing so. We believe we are well-positioned to capitalize on opportunities as they come to us to monetize assets and bring assets online in cost effective ways as we continue to expand the McCoy complex, which ultimately will generate the cash flow to continue to support the business as a whole in its entirety in a very profitable way as well as our Wyoming County Complex, which is probably one of the most attractive virgin opportunities in the market today. I thank you all for your time and look forward to the balance of this year as we continue to showcase the execution of where the businesses are positioned today and the opportunity that we have in front of us. And now, I can turn over to the moderator for some Q&A.