Ian Atkinson
Analyst · Rossport Investments. Please proceed with your question.
Good morning, Dan. Well, you got part of it right. It is – the property itself is up about 2,000 meters and it’s not inhabited. It’s primarily pasture land or grazing land for sheep and goat. So, it only gets summer use. There actually is some white snow up there in the winter. So, it’s not treed at all. It’s – the nearest communities of the three small villages close by. And one of the key issues is that we have maintained excellent relationships with those communities from the early stages of exploration. And we have set up a group on the ground with all of our local and permitting and CSR work is done by a group of Turkish nationals that some of them have now worked for us for three or four years that have built up, as I say, excellent communications and relationships with the local villages and regional staff. So that it’s been a large part, I think to the communication exercise. So, that when we file the EIA with the initial public hearings, which were held last August, we got a very good attendance, very good input that you can probably guess for yourself what the three principal questions were, so we were ready to address them. That’s how you handle cyanide, where you are going to get your water and what is in it for us, i.e., what’s the local procurement, local employment opportunities. And again, we would organize for that. And particularly, the water aspects are critical in many parts of the world today, and we’ve been very fortunate that we actually, again, hired a Turkish consultant and expert. We’ve been able to actually already purchase and drill two wells, so we have the water supply for the project secured. And we actually did, again, get the local villages involved in that, so they’ve been aware of where we’re going to be drawing water from. And it’s been clearly demonstrated that it doesn’t have any impact on their – the availability of water for them for their agricultural activities. So the other part – I guess, again, we are in an area that has been, in the past, mining activity. So it’s not on the property itself, but it is a historical mining district. There is still ongoing mining in the region as well as other commodities.