 Friends, for large scale behavioral change, we need to offer solutions that are innovative, affordable and powered by public participation. Let me give you an example. The people of India decided to embrace LED bulbs on a scale that has never been seen before. As on 1st March 2021, around 37 million LED bulbs are being used. This has saved cost and energy. Over 38 million tons, carbon dioxide have been reduced per year. There is another example of India, give it a moment. A simple request made to people to give up their LPG subsidy for the benefit of the more needy people. Several people across India voluntarily gave up their subsidy. This played a major role in India being able to provide smoke-free kitchens to lack of households. LPG coverage in India has seen a remarkable growth from 55% in 2014 to 99.6% today. Women have been the major gainers due to this. These days, I am seeing one more very positive change. Waste to wealth is becoming the buzzword in India. Our citizens are coming up with unique recycling models in diverse sectors. This would give a boost to the circular economy. Our country is boosting waste to wealth generation under sustainable alternative towards affordable transportation initiatives. 5,000 compressed biogas plants will be set up by 2024 with a production target of 15 MMT. It would help the environment and further human empowerment. Friends, there is growing acceptance to ethanol across India. Based on people's response, we have decided to advance the target of 20% blending of ethanol in petrol by 2025 from the earlier 2030. Friends, it would make you all happy that over the last 7 years, India's forest cover has grown significantly. The population of lions, tigers, leopards and waterfalls has grown. These are great indicators of positive behavioral changes. It is these changes that convinces that India is well on track to achieve its Paris Agreement targets well before the target date of 2030.