RE:RE:Sell the asset and stop dreaming.
"Lucky to get .90" would be a major understatement. Would be lucky to get today's share price. After all these years, if any real investor were interested in "the asset", there would be signs by now. And they would likely be buying shares to lower the cost of acquisition.
The key issue to keep in mind is that the project is still not viable based on phosphate prices. If somebody wants to make a big investment in phosphate, they will obviously choose a lower cost project. They are not going to spend multi millions for a lottery ticket that only wins with higher phosphate prices.