 I wanted to talk about how standards in the Costa Rican case have been worked collaboratively between ITU and the Costa Rican government and how that has ended up in a couple of publications that have shown how is the reality and the opportunities and the challenges that we face as a country and also as a Latin American region. I wanted to talk about that it's not just about making digital transformation sustainable but ensuring it because making it sounds like we're fixing something, like fixing a wrong. And in that sense, I was trying to urge the different stakeholders and the different parts that conform the ecosystem to work together in terms of ensuring the whole process from high-level discussions to concrete actions and influence in the citizens and embracing the data, harnessing the standards and getting to work. Well, Costa Rica has very nice opportunities in terms of sustainability. Most of the energy comes from renewable resources, about 98% of the energy we're using in our country. And also in Costa Rica, we have this solidarity scheme about telecommunications that allows to be very inclusive and allows to do infrastructure projects in different rural and remote areas that can extend all the way to more vulnerable areas. We think also that the challenges have to do with how policies are implemented, how policies, how aggressive policies are towards inclusion, towards bridging the digital divide and also towards ensuring sustainability issues like, for example, the use of or the disposal of electronic waste, of e-waste, how voluntary that is or how compulsive. So we think that one of the challenges, the important challenges is to promote timely policies and important standards that have already been developed with the participation of Costa Rica and making sure that the different operation that it involves actually happens and happens in the country. This is fundamental because it involves many different actors in the telecommunications and ICT sector. It goes from leaders and decision makers, policymakers, all the way to regulators, to network operators, to service providers, to manufacturers and also going down to social different organizations and the users and the consumers themselves. So these different conversations that we can have here that are normally high level but we can address and reach many of these different actors, allow to send a message that could be embraced and that could be at least heard by the different actors and maybe promote some consciousness in them and to take the actions that are corresponding. We've had a great collaboration with ITU in the sense of important evaluation in national and regional levels both in Costa Rica and Latin America, which ended up in a report that gives us a great monitor of e-waste management in the region and also in Costa Rica. And besides that, we've also had a great collaboration in a project that tried to show the experience in Costa Rica of implementing the different standards and recommendations. These two collaborations that we've had with ITU have leveraged the whole waste management in Costa Rica specifically for electronic and electric equipment.