 I see it engaging more, thankfully, through the institutionalisation of the LPAA, the Lima Paris Action Agenda, what is currently becoming the Global Climate Action Agenda. It provides an interesting platform for the private sector to be mobilised. In the context, the private sector has already been mobilising. We've noticed, all of us, a very important change, a paradigm shift in how the private sector has been contributing to the concrete, tangible solution to the climate change challenges all over the world. The predictability is very important for the private sector. And in that context, first of all, we have the Paris Agreement. In the INDCs, we have about 100 and more than 160 INDCs that were submitted, representing 189 parties to the UNFCCC. And those INDCs provide a very interesting platform to provide predictability and reassure the sector that all kinds of national actors are coherent in the way they approach the issue. On top of that, if we are to use the Moroccan example, coherence in public policy is very key to enabling sustainable and substantive investment from the private sector. In particular, for example, in the case of Morocco in 2012, we reduced, we started phasing out fossil fuel subsidies because we want to be coherent with our effort to improve and enhance the capacities of our country in renewable energy. What I find very interesting and very creative about the Paris Agreement that provides us with a more global legal framework for climate change action is the bottom-up approach that relies strongly on the willingness of all the parties and the drive of all the parties to address the issue of climate change at a national level that makes sense to the means and makes sense to the priorities that they happen to have at the national level. So when I think of it from a legal perspective, I find that the main challenge that we have to think of is really the domestic level to provide more of a sense of ownership of all those different parties to the UNFCCC about the INDCs that they committed to. Because each INDC comes with legal implications as to how they should reframe their own landscape. There is the global landscape and solutions such as the one that is being driven by this very forum in terms of having a global framework for a more individualized action is also a very key component to that. My hopes are a bit more than hope, they're expectations. I think there's a very strong drive and urge to make sure that concrete resorts are reached in Morocco. And in that context, we have identified five areas where we feel that we can definitely reach some concrete outcomes. The first one would be the implementation of the Paris Agreement per se. There's a set of decisions that have to be taken for more than we have to make sure that the machine, all the gears are turning the way it is supposed to and well greased. And thankfully we still benefit from what we call the spirit of Paris, this constructive spirit that emerged among negotiators, ministers and truly all the citizens of the world to make the Paris Agreement a success that it is. Well, first of all I was, I mean I was about to say I was very impressed by the calibre of the presentation I've seen, but I was expecting them to be that good because I attended the event last year and it was just very very inspiring. When it comes to more concrete things that have been very interesting to see, gave me food for thought, has been really the realization that there is at the same time that we are trying to move past the economic value system to have metrics to drive investment, we are still aware that when it comes to trying to showcase and drive a paradigm shift in the investment behavior it is important to not lose sight of them and how we can really showcase that they can be concrete financial positive and competitive financial returns from investing in that field is in sustainable landscapes is something that I was happy to see in the morning and I want to keep on learning more today in the afternoon as well.