 Today is Wednesday, the 10th of September, and I'm going to be reporting on what has happened, not so much in the park because we are bogged down in negotiations on the text. We've only got a very slow progress. They are negotiating on text, but they're very, very slow. We may go well into the night tonight, and well into the night tomorrow, and perhaps the ministers might be engaged at some point either later today or tomorrow. But I'm going to now talk about another off-site event that took place, which is the Africa Clean Death event. This is a program jointly run by the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, and it's about taking the fund to support primarily climate services and climate information to feed into adaptation to climate change in the continent of Africa. They did a call for proposals where they got over 165 proposals from all over Africa, and yesterday they announced the winner of the first award of research grant. They also announced a one million dollar program for fellowships for young researchers in Africa. This is going to be a significant, improved winter in housing capacity, scientific capacity in Africa. It was attended by African ministers and various other negotiators. I was invited to say a few words on South-South cooperation, not just within Africa, but across Africa and Asia, having done a fair amount of South-South capacity building at my center in Bangladesh, the International Center for Climate Change and Development, and it was quite gratifying to have a number of alumni present at that data dialogue. So one of the things that happens at these clubs is a lot of parallel events take place, cultural events take place, big marches in the city of Lima today as well, and various other occasions take place at the same time. The Clean Death Africa event is a significant event, particularly for the country of Africa, and it's good to see it finally getting launched going into operation.