 I think what we have benefited is the network of colleagues from different countries and then we have had a very good opportunity to benchmark with others what we are doing. The University of Cyprus has been benefited as its library is an open or not. Since we are the main actor of open science in Cyprus, we were collaborating with national bodies in the creation of the national policy. We are participating in focus groups and ad hoc groups for open science in Cyprus and in the European level. This created the national policy of Cyprus in 2016 and in 2022 the revision of the national policy for open science in Cyprus. The benefit to participate in Open Air is the alliance that we have in Spain so they support us, so we can support our national community and facilitate our participation in the different horizon Europe calls so we can be there and be the strategic partner. And also we belong in the international community so they can help us in the different guidelines and the different projects that we have to be as national contact point. It has allowed me to really engage with a network of international partners and currently my position within GISC is to collaborate the international work within GISC so making sure all the different efforts within GISC are talking to one another and that really has come about because of my engagement first and foremost with Open Air. So the University of Malta is the main educational institution on the Maltese Islands. We are leading open science on the Maltese Islands way back in 2014. We've set up our institutional repository. It was the first institutional repository in Malta which serves also as the national repository. Immediately after that we have also implemented an open access policy for our university and all this was done basically with the support and expertise of Open Air. Open Science was relatively new to us and with the support of Open Air as well as with networks that we've built immediately after joining Open Air. Obviously these were extremely beneficial for us to ensure that the implementation of policies and infrastructures to support Open Science for the Maltese Islands are to the maximum of our academia and researchers in Malta. Open Air is helping us with our activities by giving us guidelines, materials and by just having someone to talk about certain things and to see how other countries did the same thing that we are trying to do. Ok, the University of Minho is a member of Open Air since the beginning so basically we work a lot around the support and training but we also act as a national open access task trying to do the connection between the national open science initiatives, the national infrastructure on the scholarly communication and the Open Air and then working several projects on support, open science of tasks and open science and RBM training.