Seahawks, there are still a number of parties who prefer to keep the lid on. The most important risk to shareholders is a low-ball offer, as one may assume Not all Majors will make it to the bidding table. Happened to WesternZagros last week. It is just a few players in a rather divided market, based on their size and share of market. Cliffs did not go up the ranks through the ROF. It is Glencore, BHP, Vale, Norilsk and maybe a dark horse. Vale being the one less likely to me. Will any of them look the other side if it is the new Sudbury indeed. Are any of them ready to take up a big new project or are they still busy decreasing debt levels and reshuffle existing assets. They are in no hurry if the rest is Not. Until things change, and I agree with Djje, Babjak and many of the others that as time passes by, urgency and pressure have gone up to unseen level. For more than a reason of business cases, the already long wait, since a low-ball offer will serve none. Building the road can, FN agreements be in the end only be done with a reliable and cash-rich Major at hand. It is Not going to be Noront, there is no body, or private investor or authority who will invest without clear sight for the Major the ROF needs. Timing seems to be on our side now as FN are turning towards development, less political hazards for the one ultimately stepping in. If Alan says this will happen, As he did recently, I expect him to know more about where the real interest stems from. It has become a larger opera than expected, way too big for Noront with few staff and no existing client data and contacts, no history of door-to-door delivery in time, to do it themselves. The Chinese window of opportunity is closing for a reason, there is another name.