 Start with a video here. Heal plus 20. The major global conference regarding sustainable development. Brazil. Key player on this new development model. The Belomonte Hydroelectric Dam. The biggest and most polemic government construction in the history of Brazil. And what do you have to do with this? Belomonte Announcement of War is a project founded by over 3000 people all over Brazil and the world. Our team ran against time to get this film done before the heal plus 20. And we've made it. Now let's spread this information around. If you want to know more, watch the film. If you think that people should know more about share the film. The next environmental submit might happen 20 years from now. Now is the time for us to choose what future we want. So what this really has to do with you? We had a blackout today. And it's very clear for everybody that energy is essential for human survival when an economy functioning. We all need, mankind chose this more than 100,000 years ago. We chose to capture the energy available in our surrounding district towards goods and service productions. Belomonte is a project of building this massive hydroelectric dam on the Shingo River, which is the heart of the Amazon rainforest. And the Mbengo Cree people, which is called Kaipao as well and Haonin in particular, it's a spokesperson for this resistance to this project and why there's so much resistance to this project. I would like to explain here real quick. The problem is that we have three indigenous people living in the area. And the Brazilian government is not taking consideration. They write it down, this people is not directly affected. And many other environmental and social costs have been underestimated on this. So I want to talk about sharing this information. When you know that something is wrong, something is terribly wrong in our country, in our society, because it concerns everybody. Human rights are threatened. It's all of our concern. It doesn't matter if you're Brazilian or American. So what happened? I went there, I went to the Shingo, I spent three years of my life on this project. In the beginning it was a fiction, it was a feature film, and I wrote the script for about a year. And when I got in the Amazon, I realized that I knew absolutely nothing about Amazon. I knew nothing about indigenous. So I started research and I started the film so people can know what's happening in the Amazon right now. It's very important for us to expose the economic interest around Belomonte and all this 130 hydroelectric dams that are planned to the Amazon. And it has to do with mining. It's a war. It's a war of information, it's a war for land, for minerals. And all this ethical, I think this ethical sense that is starting to grow with Facebook, with internet, this can help a lot us to change the way things are going over there. It's already happening. Since I started the film, things change a lot from the first expedition to the third. Many people that would forward them now it's against. So I'm here trying to defend the idea of a new ethical evolution, not revolution, evolution, because it's needed. We have to go this way. The mankind, it's up to destroy the thing that we most seek. We have to destroy the tribes, the indigenous people represent balance, represent true sustainability. Belomonte, it's not new or renewable, it's not sustainable. And we can prove it with numbers. The shingles goes dry during six months of the years so the hydroelectric dam is so big but doesn't really produce energy. And what is the price for this energy? Why the energy from Belomonte? They say it's so cheap and I'm saying it's so expensive because the environmental and social costs are underestimated. And the day that we'll be able to put in the equation all these costs, I think other kind of other ideas, other ways to produce energy will show up and we'll be able to know if we're paying $77 for the megawatt hour or we're paying actually $200 or $300. So it's up to the consumer as well. It's very important for everybody to know what's happening in the Amazon rainforest right now. That's why I ask you to watch the film, share in the 17th Sunday. Now it will be a worldwide premiere. It's for free. There's share with friends, share the idea. Get everybody to get in the room to show the movie. That's the idea I think is worth spreading. And I just want to finish saying that this is the Hawni Burduna. Hawni he carved in the wood for me and gave to me so I could speak on his ideas as well or around. So he trusts me for this. And I think society needs to trust in these people to protect the forest. These people are the guardians of the forest. Society counts on them. We count on them. If you see it properly to the images in the satellite, you see that the only place where it still jungles to forest is where they live. We are not capable to, we are not able to do this. White people, as they say, destroy the forest. They protect. So let's protect them. This thing we can do. We can do this.