 If we look across all the various risks that cities are facing in terms of climate change, I would argue that the one denominator that all of those risks are sharing is people and the need for behavioural change. Also you could say that social resiliency is a prerequisite to coming up with the right solutions of infrastructure when we look forward. If people are not locally connected in their everyday, in the communities they live in, they are less likely to help each other at an incident, at a great event. I work with city planning, so at the stage where we are helping politicians to set visions, develop strategic frameworks, do plans for existing communities or new developments and even in the design and implementation stages. So we try to engage citizens at all these various levels of decision making right from the very beginning and I think we have smart technology systems today that can actually help us engage people in a much wider way than that we used to do. We don't even, we don't have to only rely on setting up meetings and meeting the usual suspects, you could say. We can use social media as a way of interaction but I also highly, highly advocate for doing experiments, doing temporary projects so that people can vote with their feet.