TMC Metals (NASDAQ:TMC) reported first-quarter financial results on Thursday. The transcript from the company's first-quarter earnings call has been provided below.
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The full earnings call is available at https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/kau3m5b7/
Summary
TMC Metals announced the signing of a production agreement with Allsees for the first commercial polymetallic nodule collection system, highlighting confidence in regulatory progress.
NOAA determined TMC Metals' application for the TMC USA Project is in compliance, moving towards a commercial recovery permit expected in Q1 2027.
The company is advancing feasibility studies for a potential processing and refining facility in Texas, aiming to support a broader American offshore minerals industry.
TMC Metals reported a net loss of $20.6 million in Q1 2026, consistent with the previous year, but maintains strong liquidity with $164 million cash on hand.
Management expressed optimism about future strategic partnerships and the potential for government support in building domestic processing infrastructure.
Full Transcript
OPERATOR
Good afternoon everyone and thank you for participating in the metals company first quarter 2026 corporate update conference call. Joining us today are the metal company's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Gerard Barron, Chief Financial Officer Craig Sheske and Chief Innovation and Offshore Technology Officer Rutger Boslin. Following their remarks, we'll open the call for your questions. Before we go further, I would like to turn the call over to CFO Craig Sheske as he reads the Company's Safe harbor statement within the meeting of the Private Securities Litigation Reform act of 1995 that provides important cautions regarding forward looking statements and information about the use of non GAAP measures. Craig, please go ahead.
Craig Sheske (Chief Financial Officer)
Thank you very much. Please note that during this call certain statements made by the Company will be forward looking and based on management's beliefs and assumptions from information available at this time. These statements are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties, many of which may be beyond our control. Additionally, please note that the Company's actual results may differ materially from those anticipated and except as required by law, we undertake no obligation to update any forward looking statement. Our remarks today may also include non GAAP financial measures, including with respect to free cash flows and additional details regarding these non GAAP financial measures, including reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures can be found in our slide deck being used with this call and will also be posted on our website. You're welcome to follow along with that slide deck or if you're joining by phone, access it at any time at Investors Metals Co. I'll now turn the call over to our Chairman and CEO Gerard Barron. Jared, please go ahead.
Gerard Barron (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer)
Thank you Craig and thanks to all of you for joining us today. Well, as we said during our last call, if 2025 was about a transformation, 2026 is about accelerated execution. In the six weeks since our last call, we have several developments to report from tmc, our partners, our regulator and the emerging nodule industry in general. The big development this week was the signing of our Production agreement with Allseas which will enable us to complete commission and operate the first commercial polymetallic nodule for collection system. The Agreement and while many of the key commercial terms and concepts have been reflected within our filings and technical reports for years, I believe the signing of this agreement shows the confidence that we and Allseas have in the regulatory path forward and the confidence that now is the time to prepare for commercial production. In late April, NOAA determined our Consolidated Application for TMC USA Project to be in full compliance with the requirements of the Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Resources act and its implementing regulations. This milestone represents the latest in what we expect to be a consistent and transparent cadence of regulatory milestones in the coming weeks and months, and we expect that our application will shortly be posted to the Federal Register, kickstarting one of a number of sequential public comment periods as part of NOAA's rigorous process. Once our application is certified, NOAA will notify the public of its intent to prepare and publish an Environmental Impact Statement under the National Environmental Policy Act. A draft EIS and TCRS will also be posted for public comment, and once the EIS and TCRS are finalized, the NOAA is expected to make a final determination on issuing the license and permit. You'll notice that the comment periods in blue on this slide are required to remain open for 60 days and they represent elements of the decompressed ensuring due consideration for our application and a robust process. Non compressible There are no mandatory time limits on other steps, so the regulator has some flexibility in how they move through these and we continue to expect the grant of our commercial recovery permit during Q1 of next year. Our strategy has always relied on partnerships. The quality and depth of the strategic partnership we've assembled across offshore operations, onshore processing and refining and project execution is what has allowed us to move fast and on the offshore side. Allseas brings more than 40 years of deep water engineering and operations, including a long track record of pioneering entirely new offshore technologies at industrial scale across processing and refining. We have strong relationships with globally recognized metallurgical and engineering groups including Pamco and Glencore, Glencore's, xps, Hatch Associates Inc. All of whom have already worked with nodule derived materials and together with our partners we have collected, lifted and processed thousands of tons of polymetallic nodules, something no other company in our industry has achieved. We believe this level of industrial capability around the project is one of the reasons TMC continues to maintain a multi over others in the offshore mineral sector and while others are still exploring, we are already building and integrated. And ultimately downstream. On May 11th we signed an agreement with ALLSEAS for the completion of the development of the first commercial production system and the future operation of this system after expected permitted permitting approval. Much of this work is already well advanced and in a clear sign of their confidence that this industry is moving towards commercial readiness. All these have agreed to fund a significant portion of the pre production costs and for these costs to be repaid over time after commencement of production. This agreement is not just a major milestone for TMC and allseas, but for the development of the seabed mineral industry more broadly. And I'm pleased. Today we have TMC's Chief Innovation and Offshore Technology Officer, Rutger Pozland on the line to tell you more about our offshore system and operations. And of course, Rutger led the development and successful testing of of our pilot module collection system while he was at Allseas before coming over to join our team to help bring us to commercial operations. Rutger, over to you.
Rutger Boslin (Chief Innovation and Offshore Technology Officer)
Thank you, Jared. It is a pleasure to be here today. What you see here are the key elements of the first integrated commercial offshore nodule production system. Designed for continuous operation, the system collects nodules on the seafloor and lifts them to the Hidden Gem vessel production castle where they are dewatered, temporarily stored and then transferred to transport vessels to be shipped to shore for processing. The operation integrate offshore nodule collection, vertical transport transfer activities, support vessels, environmental monitoring and adaptive management, and downstream logistics into a continuous operating model with tightly coordinated logistics. Our offshore operational model has been designed to support uninterrupted offshore nodule collection. A transfer vessel will move alongside and receive nodules from the Hidden Gem vessel. While the Hidden Gem vessel system keeps collecting nodules then moves to the offshore transfer area for loading onto wheel carriers. Wheel carriers are then loaded offshore and transport nodules onboard to onshore processing facilities. Supply vessels rotate crew and shuttle fuel and materials between our logistics base in San Diego and Hidden Gem vessel and the transfer vessel. These operations require highly synchronized vessel movements, dynamic positioning and coordinated transfer activities to maintain safe, efficient and continuous production. To achieve this, our project team and Allseas have conducted extensive simulation and modeling to refine the logistic cycles under real offshore conditions. As engineers, we love a challenge and we are focused on ensuring that our system can operate reliable and efficiently day after day while integrating seamlessly with production support, transport and handling systems at the surface to maintain continuous operations. This work has produced what we believe will be practical and scalable operations, and we will continue to further optimize every aspect of these cycles ahead of commercial production. The execution program for the offshore production system is underway. Concept and basic engineering activities for the key long lead packages have been substantially advanced and completed by olses, including for key items like the riser lounge and recovery system, umbilical and vessel integration works. With these activities complete, we are now in a position to move into procurement and subcontracting activities with suppliers. This program keeps us on track to begin integration and commissioning of the production System in late 2027. The first commercial nodule production system is a major milestone for the company and this industry. It also establishes the operational and engineering baseline for future optimization. As we deploy additional offshore production system, it becomes easier to repeat engineering processes at scale and to incorporate operational learnings across the broader production network. The team have been hard at work evaluating opportunities to optimize our operations, including large scale production systems, autonomous and remote vessel operations, alternative logistic configurations and what could potentially be the first nuclear powered vessels in commercial use, a topic that allses discussed during the TMC Strategy day panel in 2025. Larger production system and wider collector spreads could significantly improve throughput and overall asset utilization, while autonomous and remote offshore operations could reduce offshore crew, fuel and support requirements over time. We are also evaluating the direct offloading of nodules from the hidden gem to dynamically positioned bill carriers, simplifying offshore transfer activities and reducing transport costs. This growing industry is dynamic as we scale, the many optimizations being developed to serve the seabed minerals ecosystem are creating credible routes towards continuous reduction of offshore collection and transfer costs. Though some of these concepts require further development, they highlight the optionality and scalability of our offshore production model beyond the first system. With that, I would like to hand it back over to Jared. Jared, please proceed.
Gerard Barron (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer)
Thank you Rutger well, a little over a year ago, President Trump issued an executive order that altered the trajectory of our industry. It provided a clear policy signal that offshore minerals were a priority for the current administration and it was willing to leverage America's long standing legal regime to secure industry leadership. The response was unprecedented. At least nine American companies focused on offshore minerals in the high seas and exclusive economic zones. We estimate companies now have about 1.5 million square kilometers of the sea floor under license or application. Like the highest 5 to 8 trillion dollars in contained mineral value. American shale revolution helped the US to end its energy dependence and become a net energy exporter, and we believe that offshore minerals have the potential to do the same for American mineral dependence when it comes to critical base and rare earths, provided we establish domestic processing and refining capacity. The national security case for construction of domestic nodule processing and refining facilities has grown stronger after all four of our base metals were designated critical in the latest USGS list, the administration issued a Presidential Proclamation warning of the serious national security risks posed by America's near total import reliance for metals like manganese, cobalt and nickel. And more recently, a request for project proposals from the Defense Industrial Base Consortium, which TMC recently joined, underscored the administration's efforts to reduce import dependencies. 13 minerals including nickel. These domestic actions are unfolding in response to the weaponization of critical minerals. Several governments are restricting exports of metals such as nickel, manganese and cobalt as well as rare, all present in our nodules. A recent OECD report found that nickel, cobalt and manganese, three of the 10 metals most affected by export restrictions. These are serious matters for the US to solve and we will continue working with officials on both sides of the aisle to do our part in the coming decades. And to that end we've been looking at several sites to build domestic processing and refining facilities. TMC USA currently holds an exclusive right of negotiation with the Port of Brownsville over land that could support a large scale metals processing and refining ecosystem. Importantly, this is not just about TMC's first process. It has been sized with the potential to support a broader American offshore minerals industry and facilities designed with the flexibility to potentially process terrestrial feedstocks over time as well. The proposed site covers approximately 1466 acres across two parcels adjacent to the Brownsville shipping channel. With a pre feasibility study already underway. Becoming what? 12 million tonne per annum industrial park. And we're approaching this in a disciplined way. There is no capital commitment today and any further development would remain contingent on government support. And I'm sure everyone can appreciate the sensitivity of our ongoing US Government discussions, but I'll just reiterate that we continue to have frequent discussions with the cabinet departments and agencies named in the order and we'll share more information at the appropriate time to advance our potential processing and refining plans and a strategic partnership agreement with Mariana Resources Minerals whose team combines deep industrial project experience with software designed specifically for large scale mineral processing projects. What attracted us to Mariana Resources was not just the and construction experience, but their focus on integrating software automation and AI driven operational system direct to project delivery and plant operations. From day one. Mariana Resources's leadership includes former executives and operators from companies including Tesla, basf, Exxon, Lithium Americas with experience spanning mineral processing, epc, execution scale commissioning and the partnership is intended to accelerate feasibility work around the Brownsville site while also evaluating how advanced process controls, operational software and digital project management tools could improve execution timelines, capital efficiency and long term operating performance. Importantly, we're evaluating Brownsville not simply as a processing site for TMC USA's initial production area, but as a potential long term industrial platform capable of supporting broader growth in American critical mineral supply chains. As additional American operators move through the NOAA licensing process, we believe there could be meaningful strategic advantages in developing shared downstream processing infrastructure rather than duplicating standalone facilities this is still early stage work, but we believe these are the kinds of long term industrial partnerships required to build a scalable domestic critical minerals industry. On April 8, the metals royalty company TMCR began trading on NASDAQ. Craig joined the NASDAQ with the TMCR team, including our current and former board members, Michael Hess, Brian Pace, Braga On a personal note, I'd like to congratulate Brian, Michael and the entire TMCR team on this milestone and I'd like to congratulate them on their recent capital raise and of the Mesabi Metallics project. And I'll now turn the call over to Craig to discuss these topics in more detail and also walk you through our financials. Craig, over to you.
Craig Sheske (Chief Financial Officer)
Thanks Jared. As a reminder, the cornerstone of TMCR's portfolio is a 2% gross overriding royalty on the Norrie area, which originated from our 2023 agreement with the predecessor company, Low Carbon Royalties. As part of that agreement, TMC received an equity stake in TMCR itself, whose market capitalization has appreciated significantly and now stands at roughly 3/4 of a billion dollars, indicating a value for TMC's current 25% equity stakeholder of nearly $200 million. Importantly, we retain the right to repurchase up to 75% of the NORI royalty over time at a capped return which could ultimately reduce that royalty to 0.5%. And since listing, TMCR has also announced, as Jared noted, a proposed royalty interest in the Mesabi Metallics iron ore project in Minnesota, one of the United States only large scale sources of merchant doctor grade iron ore pellets with production targeted for the second half of 2026 alongside a concurrent equity financing. It's also worth mentioning that the US ex IM bank previously announced its support of up to $10 billion for the development of a major iron ore processing and refining facility with Mesabi Metallics in Minnesota. I would encourage all of our investors to check out the Corporate update webinar held by TMCR on May 13th. Just yesterday and that's available for replay at their website themetalsroyaltyco.com Last August we announced two major technical studies, pre Feasibility Study and Initial Assessment. The PFS on our first Production area Excuse me, The PFS is focused on our first production area and established the world's first reserves for a nodule project. While also confirming the project's strong commercial case. The initial assessment extended across the other areas highlighted on this slide in Royal Blue. These studies were comprehensive and independently supported by multiple qualified persons, but they do not include the additional ground where we have priority rights under U.S. law. Because those areas sit close to the zones already assessed in our published studies, we see them as offering substantial further exploration upside. And it's important to remember that these studies are point in time analyses which do not reflect certain potential plans such as the US Government Supported Processing Facility. Nor do they reflect every opportunity that we in allses might have to reduce costs offshore, as Rutger walked us through earlier. But they do provide a helpful snapshot into the commercial viability of our proposed operations, particularly given the world first Declaration of Probable Reserves in our PFS for a nodule project at today's metal prices or close to today's metal prices, the value reflected in these studies is substantial. Taken together, the 5.5 billion NPV from the PFS plus the 18.1 billion NPV from the initial assessment apply a combined estimated resource of $23.6 billion and across the life of both projects on an undiscounted basis, the studies point to approximately 369 billion in revenue and more than 200 billion in EBITDA and a cost profile that places the project in the first quartile of the nickel cost curve. Now onto our liquidity and financials. You would have noticed that our liquidity, defined as cash on hand plus our credit facilities, was approximately 164 million as of March 31, 2026. However, I want to be clear, as noted in our earnings release, this is inclusive of $9 million received on the last day of the quarter related to sell-to-cover tax transactions on stock based compensation granted in prior years which was then remitted to tax authorities shortly after quarter end. So this was merely a bit of a timing quirk given dates on which the cell to cover transactions had to occur following a last reporting period and then once that was finished and funds received those were remitted to the tax authorities. Keep in mind that the headline number reflecting vesting shares that were granted at far lower share prices and we expect a strong alignment of interest between TMC employees and shareholders will continue to deliver results in the years ahead. Onto the financial results. TMC reported a net loss of approximately $20.6 million in the first quarter of 2026, which was the same as the comparable period in 2025. Net loss per share was $0.05 in the first quarter of 2026 compared to $0.06 in the comparative period. Exploration and evaluation expenses for the three months ended March 31, 2026 were $13.3 million compared to $9.5 million in 2025 due to higher share based compensation from third quarter 2025 awards for employee retention and higher PFS costs due to the PFS refresh partially offset by lower all season engineering costs. G and A expenses in Q1 2026 were 20.7 million compared to the $8.5 million in the comparative quarter last year primarily due again to the amortization of higher one time executive retention grants. Share based compensation issues in the third quarter of 2025. I am getting a bit of an echo so if anybody else in the line is able to mute, hopefully we can get rid of that. In Q1 2026 the gain on change in fair value of warrants was $10.7 million as the value of the private warrants decreased due to the lower share price at the end of Q1 2026 compared to the share price year end 2025 and the shorter maturity term on other non operating items.
Craig Sheske (Chief Financial Officer)
Other non operating items that reduced the net loss in Q1 2026 included a higher interest income generated from increased cash balances and again resulting from the dilution of our ownership in the Metals Royalty company as it completed a private placement to third parties at a price well in excess of book value that was partially offset by equity accounted investment losses. Onto the cash flow side, net cash used in operating activities was in the first quarter of 2026 $0.6 million compared to $9.3 million used in operating activities in the first quarter of 2025. The outflow in Q1 2026 is nominal due to a timing difference. As I mentioned earlier, the 9 million of tax withholdings received at the end of March and remitted to tax authorities shortly after the end of the quarter. If the tax withholding receipts are excluded, the cash used in operations would have been $9.6 million which is in line with the first quarter of 2025. Free cash flow for Q1 2026 was negative 0.6 million compared to negative 9.4 billion in Q1 2025 and free cash flow is a non GAAP measure and I would point you to our disclosure in the non GAAP reconciliation table that will be posted in the slide deck with our website. We do believe that our cash on hand, along with the undrawn unsecured credit facility from Jared, our CEO and Chairman and Aris Capital LLC will be more than sufficient to meet our working capital and capital expenditure requirements for at least the next 12 months from today. TNC liquidity stood at 164 million as at March 31, including 44 million available from that undrawn credit facility. Our accounts payable and accrued liabilities balance at March 31, 2026 was 53.9 million and includes $32.1 million that was owed to all Cs for various services provided, the majority of which is being settled through the issuance of TMC shares as disclosed in our 10Q, excluding the ALCEs payable to be settled in equity and the 9 million payable to tax authorities which has since been remitted, accounts payable and accrued liabilities would have been quarter end, $13 million. Operator, we would now like to open it up to the phone line for any Q and A.
OPERATOR
Certainly as a reminder to ask a question, you will need to press Star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. Please stand by while we compile our Q and A roster. And our first question will be coming from the line of Matthew o' Keefe of Cantor Fitzgerald. Your line is open.
Matthew O'Keefe (Equity Analyst)
Thanks, operator. Evening, gentlemen. Hey, Matt, sounds like things are moving along pretty well. I just had a kind of question. I liked one of your slides there where you showed that you have some new entrants, well, not new, but there are more entrants jumping onto the American offshore industry here. You've shown some other companies and all in their properties lying about in the CCZ and also I guess, other parts of the ocean there. What are your thoughts on these other players and are you working at all with them? I mean, you have arguably a leadership position in this. I would imagine there, there has been some outreach to you, just maybe for some best practices or, you know, given that you've done so much environmental work. Maybe some advice on that as well. Yeah, look, Matt, we've been, you know, familiar with some of the other entrants. We know them well and frankly, you know, the last five years as a public company has damaged my belief in the efficient markets hypothesis. But at the same time, it wouldn't be good for us to be the only ones through the wall here seeing the opportunity. So I think what it really signifies is the fact that the capital, the smart money, is flowing into names that are pursuing exploration licenses through the US process as opposed to the International Seabed Authority process. That's clear. The market's voting with their feet. Are there opportunities to, are there opportunities there potentially to work with some of these entrants? Sure. I mean, we've done quite a bit of work over the course of, you know, the last several years that, you know, many other people might want to catch up to. Of course, we released some of our environmental data just a few weeks ago. But there really is, I think, a recognition that, you know, many of the new entrants have some catch up to do. They're starting on, you know, exploration type work, whereas TMC has done much of that because we're preparing to launch an application to the ISA process with some of that data. So there will be, I think, a catch up period for others and that creates opportunities, one thing to really focus on. And by the way, you would have noticed there was an announcement within the last couple of months that, you know, the team at Deep Sea Vision, we have an MOU to collaborate potentially together, whether it's on some offshore exploration side initiatives or potentially down the road on processing and refining. We do want to be able to help the United States create an ecosystem that can potentially create dominance in the metal processing and refining for nickel, copper, cobalt, manganese, potentially rare earths and other metals. And to do that, it would be very helpful to say, hey, TMC will be the center of this hub. But perhaps one day that could be a destination for some other entrance as they catch up to some of the offshore work the TMC has done. So we really have been in a unique position where the work that we've done has allowed us to be the 1 entrant so far who's been able to apply for the consolidated application process because we've been prepared with that work over the last 15 years and about $700 million in cumulative spending. So the answer, Matt, is we welcome the capital flowing the space, we know some of the new players, and I think there will be future opportunities to work together.
Gerard Barron (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer)
No, absolutely. It definitely demonstrates that there's increasing confidence in the space. So I think that's a positive.
Matthew O'Keefe (Equity Analyst)
If I could ask just one other quick question, maybe clarification, you are working on some pre feasibility study. Was it for the Texas refinery processing refinery, is that right? And is there going to be something released to the markets sort of end of year or something like that just to get a sense of what that might look like? Yeah, I think our focus, Matt, is really on the feasibility work specifically for the potential plant for processing refining in Texas. That feasibility work really focused on right here's, you know, the detail on everything that needs to go into the planning and construction and operation of that plant. That is really the prerequisite to unlock some of the potential government capital that we know is sitting ready to fund major projects that can truly move the needle. So I would say our focus is going to be on that onshore feasibility work. There may be opportunities to then say, right, we're working on a pre feasibility side for the plant expansion down the road, let's say to 12 million tons or more. And then of course, we put out the pre feasibility study for the NORI D area in August of last year. And we had the benefit from, you know, several years of talking about the potential commercial terms with our partner Allseize. So, you know, at some point, perhaps there might be an opportunity to provide some updates to that. But our focus in the near term is going to be the detailed feasibility work that might be able to unlock access to government capital. All right, sounds good. We'll look for the. That would be the government partnership, perhaps in the future. That's great. That's all for me. Thanks guys.
OPERATOR
Thank you. And our next question will be coming from the line of Dimitri Silverstein of Water Tower Research. Your line is open.
Dimitri Silverstein
Good afternoon. Thank you for taking my call. I just have a couple of follow up questions, if I may. When you talked about reducing or the opportunity to reduce the operating costs or optimize the cost of offshore collection and transfer portion of your. Of your operating expenses, you know, there's a lot of stuff in here like, you know, autonomy and going to nuclear, that seems to be pretty far into the future. As you're ramping up your sort of first production of 3 million tons, how are you thinking about sort of more near term, more realistic abilities to lower the production and transport cost and lower your offshore operating expenses?
Rutger Boslin (Chief Innovation and Offshore Technology Officer)
Yeah, that's a very good. Hi, Dimitri. Sorry. Yeah, Rutger, go for it. Yeah, yeah. Thank you, Dimitri. That's a very good question. And as you rightfully indicate, there's a few items that are more future focused. But on the short term, optimizations in energy use and offshore logistics are definitely something that can be implemented within the short term. So we're talking about getting the first vessel operating and then start implementing some of those already.
Dimitri Silverstein
Okay, and then to follow up on the previous question about Brown facility, you're looking at, I think 12 million ton processing complex. Your phase one at least calls for about 3 million tons a year. Of what? Nodules going up to potentially 7 million. As you expand to three collectors, are you leaving that much room for sort of third party processing? Or do you have expectations of filling that 12 million ton capacity through the nodules that you yourself collect pretty quickly after the startup, at the end of 27 early 28.
Gerard Barron (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer)
No, I think this is one of those industries where scale really flows through to the bottom line, Dimitri. And so it's our ambition to put as much of that 12 million tonnes off our own license areas. However, we also want to be really flexible because, you know, when you, when you go and establish a processing facility, there is so much investment in civil engineering and, you know, securing the ground and putting the roads in and securing power supply that, you know, the marginal cost of adding another line for another operator can be very attractive. And of course, you know, we want to have the welcome mat out to other operators. We see it as an opportunity to do deals that will be very beneficial for the industry and very beneficial for, you know, the CMC shareholders as well. And so there might be some operators who want to provide, you know, chunky capital to us to secure a certain amount of processing throughput. And so we'll have an open mind to that. And we are, we are in some of those discussions as we speak now.
Dimitri Silverstein
Understood, Gerard, thank you. And then final question in your. You're getting ready to execute your offshore capex program and get ready for production. If I remember correctly, originally this was supposed to be funded 50, 50 between you and Allseas. You made a comment that Allseas will be funding a significant portion of that now. So should I, should we take that it's going to be more than 50% of the expected CapEx that Alseas will be funding?
Gerard Barron (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer)
No, you should. And you should continue to plan on sharing that.
Dimitri Silverstein
Okay. All right, thank you, Jar.
Gerard Barron (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer)
Thanks, Dimitri. I'm going to hop over Latonya to the webcast questions to see if there are any other questions that are going to populate on the audio side. In the meantime, we have a question from Ivan Schmidt. Given that the expected. Given we're, excuse me, expecting Q1 2027 perma timing, how should investors think about the political risk around 2026 midterms and potentially a transition to new Congress in January 2027? One of the nice things about this point, happy for Jared to expand on it. This isn't really a left versus right issue. Is it obvious that, you know, this current administration and Republicans have been very supportive of this industry? Of course, but even going back to 2023, it was, I think, June of 2023 when there was first an announcement of the National Defense Authorization act with President Biden that focused on, you know, doing more feasibility work on modules. And of course, you know, Jared, we had quite a few conversations with many in the administration who saw the need for this new industry and to get there, frankly, before China does. But specifically on any risk for, you know, a midterm switch in the population of Congress, it's not going to affect this NOAA process. This is based on regulations put in place in the 1980s. Dishmer was signed by President Carter implementing regulations from 1981 for exploration, 1989 for commercial recovery. It's been the law of the land across multiple Democratic and Republican administrations. So we're going through this in a methodical way and we are not skipping over any steps. That's why Jared highlighted in our first slide the public comment periods that are not going to be compressible when it comes to the permitting timeline. That puts us in a good position to say, look, we've done the process exactly right and we followed the letter of the law and the mandate given to noaa, who, by the way, is in the best position of anybody in the world to regulate this industry as the pioneers of the environmental Science through the DOMES program in the late 70s and early 80s. So we don't think that's going to have any impact on the potential grant or validity of a commercial recovery permit for tmc. Another question, and maybe for Jared, I believe you touched on this in the last quarterly call from Tim Hole. Q4, 2027 is the target for system commissioning. Is that the same as saying it's our target for full production? So maybe just a little context on some of the timing taken for commissioning and leading to commercial production shortly thereafter. Yeah, thanks, Frey. Look, commissioning means getting the equipment on board, making sure it works, making sure all the components come together nicely. And of course, you know, what that points to is that early in the year after, you know, we'll be out there testing and we'll be out there making sure that, you know, we're in shape for commercial production. The commissioning is really getting everything on the boat, putting it all together, making sure they all fit as they're meant to fit.
Craig Sheske (Chief Financial Officer)
And the last question that I'll take from the webcast from Ryan Boley, will the September 2021 SPAC warrants be extended? Ryan, this is a question we get, I'm sure, from a lot of holders. The terms of that warrant is expiration in September of 2026. Look, it's our ambition to fill this summer with a great amount of news flow such that we might render that question moot. So we're going to keep doing everything we can, but any discussions with our board are going to be announced publicly, if and when there's anything to announce there, but it would be our focus just to push their share price to a higher level well in advance of that exercise date. But nothing else I can say. No other comment I can make at this time. And Latonya, if you want to re prompt the phone line to see if there are any final questions, certainly as
OPERATOR
a friendly reminder to ask a question, you will need to press Star 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star 11. Again, As a reminder to ask a question, please press star 11. And I would now like to turn the conference back to Gerard Barron for closing remarks.
Gerard Barron (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer)
Yes, thank you. Well, firstly, thanks everyone for turning up. And I know a lot of people listen to these reports live, but even more listen to the transcript afterwards or read the transcript afterwards. Look, as you can tell, we turn up to these quarterly earnings reports full of enthusiasm because it's really quite exciting what we're doing, getting a new industry moving. This administration has an absolute focus on re industrialization. It's an honor to deal with the government agencies which we deal with because they are filled with people from the private sector who know how to get things done. And they just get you get a sense of optimism when you're dealing with this administration and these government agencies. And I hope what that is going to lead to is us getting this industry moving a whole lot faster, a whole lot more reliably and for the benefit of America becoming minimal independent and for the benefit of those people who supported us along this journey. So thank you and we look forward to being in communication a lot with you in the coming months. And on that note, I wish you a good day.
Disclaimer: This transcript is provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, there may be errors or omissions in this automated transcription. For official company statements and financial information, please refer to the company's SEC filings and official press releases. Corporate participants' and analysts' statements reflect their views as of the date of this call and are subject to change without notice.
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