 Now, the new Electricity Act of 2023 signed into law by President Ballatino Boe for the first time allow providers of energy from renewable sources such as solar wind or water to receive a price for what they produce based on the generation costs, a development expert said with Bruce De Sector. Now, the new act mandates the Niger Electricity Regulatory Commission to prepare and provide speed in tariff rate for electricity generated from renewable energy sources as a way of encouraging investment in renewable energy power generation. According to the Act, the tariff rate will be guaranteed for a period of 10 to 15 years and subsequently be subject to a review every two years. On the show today, we'll be looking at the new Electricity Act and potentials for renewable energy. Welcome to Business Insight and plus TV Africa. I am Justin Al-Qadouni. All right. First off, before we get into the business of the day, let us start with this feature on health care finance and we'll be right back. Stay with us. The way a country finances a health care system is a critical determinant for region universal health coverage. In Nigeria, the health sector is financed through different sources and mechanisms. Unfortunately, achieving the correct blend remains a challenge. The Lexbroot have converged on this CME made and put together by Cleaner Lancet to tackle some of the inherent challenges. Access to health care, interdisciplinary collaboration, as well as medical assets financing take center stage. We know that most of the patients in Nigeria, about 70 percent of them are out of pocket, but there are initiatives that have been in place. We've always had health insurance. We have donors as well. The government has also earmarked the basic health care fund that they've put in place to be able to help the citizen to access it. So apart from budgetary allocation, these are areas and ways that we can now see that the government as well and even the private sector is trying to synergize and help to ensure that the citizens are able to afford health care. There are lots of health care enthusiasts that do not even have access to the right funding, thereby not being able to set up the kind of standard that they'll probably want to set up, not being able to, you know, the kind of technology or equipment, modern equipment that's necessary for a start-up health care organization. So basically in the medical laboratory space where we play, over the years there's been improvement, there's been a lot of entrance. The professionals does course in cancer management in Nigeria, it's efficiency and the need to ensure standardization in the medical laboratory science space. It is that go into determining what we now talk about in cancer case, individualized, personalized treatment and it means that if Mr. A and Mr. B have a particular cancer because of their genetic makeup, they will not manifest the cancer in the same way and they may necessarily not benefit from the same treatment. So those are the things that will be updating the community about that. Cancer is not one disease, but it is a heterogeneous disease. And for the laboratory, what is expected is the ISO 15189, the 2012 version. Now today they go, the 2022 version was just published. So it gives room for additional provisions for the capturing of the quality standard. So when you understand the quality standard, now you begin to look at it, how can we implement it? The definition of it is king. Now some of the challenges include the ability for us to understand what is expected from us. Two personas that have this quality management expert, the infrastructure technology to ensure that this is done. And with the rate of brain drain currently in the country, a lot of our experts who are training are moving across the country. There is a damn need to ensure that resources are used more efficiently, while at the same time removing financial barriers by shifting focus from out-of-pocket payments or OPs to order-heating resources.