Thanks, Gordon. Let me just, back up a little bit and remind everybody on the call that, while uranium often gets treated through a commodity lens, it would be wrong to conclude that you simply back up a dump truck of uranium oxide and dump it into a reactor core. And it is not the coal model. Once you have the U308, it actually begins a very long journey, through a number of really important services to arrive at often a very bespoke fuel bundle to meet the particular needs. And in fact, the particular location within any one Nuclear power plant. And we often have forgotten about that because the service side of the industry, especially enrichment and conversion, had been so well supplied for many years, prices were low as a result. And I would say, fuel buyers were very comfortable about the services they had procured, that all changed, on February 24th when Russia invaded Ukraine. It had thrust the spotlight back onto those services, Russia’s 40% of the global supply of enrichment, and they are nearly 30% of the global supply of conversion. And for utilities that meant moving from a very comfortable view of their forward service commitments to suddenly reevaluating, where they were getting those services from. So, we have seen a lot of attention pivot away from uranium downstream to enrichment and conversion. So no surprise, we have seen effectively a doubling of the enrichment price, we have seen more than a doubling of the conversion price. In fact, conversion is sitting at historic levels. We have never seen conversion prices this high before. And that is representing this focus on new areas of service that are exclusionary of Russia and that is a big challenge. But eventually, you need the product, these are just services and they need to be applied to the product, the product is uranium, and there is no substitute. We have never seen a D link cycle for the reason that you eventually need the uranium. Just like in 2021, in the beginning of 2022, there was a lot of focus on uranium, it is now shifted downstream, but it has to come back, because you need the uranium to plug into those services you have procured. So we expect to see that. But sort of a shock on the uranium side, it could take a bit longer for utilities to put in place all of that replacement service business, we are seeing obviously, the benefits on the conversion side, we can be strategically patient on the uranium side and the leverage for when that demand comes into the market. So to your final question, absolutely. We expect to be leveraged to a uranium market that starts to price in the cost required for Western capacity to meet Western demand.