 And so we're coming to the end of the three day marathon here, a couple of things I want to just review what we've done, what we've said today. As we've done in the past days, we've had, you know, someone summarise the comments that were made and I've got a recap of them. So if you just bear with me one moment, I will put that up. So the comments came today from Shubetcha Paul and a good job, a great job of summarising I think what we heard today. The first bullet there is about, you know, industrial heat is a cross-cutting challenge. I think a big theme, especially in the first panel today, was all about heat. You know, how can we, you know, what are the ways in which we can address heat management and so on and so forth and we heard about fuel switching, direct and indirect electrification of heat and energy storage and just generally heat management. And it's really obviously one of the big, big challenges, if not the big challenge of what we're talking about here in this workshop. I think probably I have to give credence to what Mark said, of course, scale. And what I once said as well, of course, scale is of course another big, big challenge, of course. We, you know, we heard about wind and solar, their potential solutions, but of course they are intermittent. And so we had both Antora Energy and Rondo Energy talk about their thermal storage approaches and using, with Rondo it was more refractory bricks, with Antora it was a graphite. They seem very, very exciting ways of trying to address the issue of trying to get heat for industry at high temperatures that you need. And they can provide that storage so that you can address that intermitency. So I think that was, I learned a lot from that. Then in academic research, you know, comments were made about the reliability of electricity supply and upscaling lab proven technologies with a system view. I think there was a, you know, we are, we can come up with technologies and lab, but can we get it to the pilot scale and move it on? I think it was one point that was made. And then the whole system view, you can't just look at this industrial processes just in isolation. You do need to see how they impact the rest of the system. And I think there was another point that was made here that resonated with me and that was actually the waste streams. There were some of the waste streams from these industrial processes. How can you look at them as a feedstock for another process? How can you work with a CO2 that comes out of one process? How can you use it somewhere else? And I think that was, that was a theme that I heard today as well. Some of the key areas that were identified, I think low loss transfer and storage of heat at high temperatures. We looked at, we heard about electrochemical options, decarbonization of the steel and cement industries. Obviously, how can we leverage some of the processes with electricity? And just actually, we even just heard about this now, you know, seasonal energy storage. How can we address things we need to think about seasonal energy storage? And so all of those, I think, were key areas. The last point here is it's not just technology. There's policy work, there's regulatory development that we need to address. These are very important if we want to come up with solutions for decarbonization, electrification of industry, modularization. We heard that this morning as well, development of disruptive technologies, of course. And yeah, the idea of retrofitting existing infrastructure. We shouldn't just think of just, you know, we've had that infrastructure. Some of these plants, they massive, they huge investments, they'll last 50 years or more. And so sometimes we need to think about retrofitting them rather than just replacing them. And of course, you know, everything that we're doing, we need to cater to societal needs. So those are some of the messages that we got out of today, our first quick snapshot. So what I would like to do now, actually, is to go to the closing session. I'd like to ask Yi Trey, the director of the Precord Institute to run this last session. He's going to be accompanied by Amy Herhold and Shafiq Jaffa. So Yi will make some closing comments and then we'll get some closing reflections from both Amy and Shafiq. So Yi, I'm going to pass it on to you.