 My name is Roshan Karanasingh. I'm professor of climate change impacts and coastal risk at IHE Delft and Deltares in the Netherlands. So what our assessment shows is that almost every inhabited region in the world is already affected by climate change. This report has a much more granular regional scale assessment of how climate change will affect various parts of the world. And so how we did this here was by employing drivers of impacts that are of climatic origin. We call them here as climatic impact drivers or for short CIDs. Some examples are mean temperature, extreme precipitation, droughts, tropical cyclones, coastal flooding like that. In all we looked at how 33 such CIDs will change in 51 regions of the world including polar regions. And what we found was that with further warming that every region of the world will feel changes in these CIDs and that with every additional bit of warming that these changes would be more pronounced and more widespread. We have high confidence that some CIDs will change in every region of the world. For example, mean temperature, heat extremes, coastal flooding, coastal erosion and marine heat waves. And some other CIDs, the way they change across the world varies from region to region so there's a lot of regional variability. So all these changes I spoke of are projected to happen by mid-century and that's only 29 years from now so it's not a lot of time left. So given also the lead times that are required for these adaptation measures it is important that we start to act now. Now is time to act. We really don't have any more time to lose.