 I'd like now to move to Christine. Christine, with Carfix, you're downstream in the value chain compared to carbon capture. So what is Carfix about? So thank you for inviting me over here. So Carfix, what we do, we are simply imitating Mother Nature's way of storing CO2. So with that in mind, our mission is to significantly contribute in the climate recovery by continuously innovating by ways of improving how we can actually store CO2 by mineralization. How we do that, I'm drinking here Pellegrino, sparkling water. So what we do, we simply dissolve CO2 just like this and we inject it into the ground where it starts to mineralize into the bedrock itself. So we are not injecting gases. We are injecting sparkling water that has the ability, Mother Nature's ability, to mineralize into the bedrock. So if you move to the next slide, please, just as a simple chemical components in the bedrock itself. In our case, we need three ingredients. First, we need CO2. The second, we need basaltic rock. And the third, we need water. What we do here, we dissolve the CO2 in water and then we gently inject it into the bedrock. Once it reaches the bedrock at a very, very low depth, somewhere around, on average, 500 meters, it starts to mineralize. So the chtonic ions in the bedrock itself, they get released and the mineralization process takes place. The easiest way to explain it is that the water is the means of transport. So we can say that the water is the train and the CO2 is the passenger. And once the train reaches the bedrock, the CO2 jumps off the train and the water carries on. So we are borrowing the water for a few, few minutes. But the mineralization, this happens in less than two years instead of what usually happens in millions of years. And this is a permanent solution. That's impressive. So first of all, congratulations in the previous slide. We've seen that CarpFix has made the cover page of National Geographic Recent Issue. This is great. And also, recently you've signed an important contract with the European Union to sequestrate carbon in Iceland. Does it mean that CarpFix can only operate in Iceland? No, Iceland is, we are an Icelandic company. So obviously, we have been piloting this and demonstrating this for quite some time. So originally, CarpFix was a research project between three universities, US, the Columbia University in New York, Iceland, University of Iceland, and CNRS of the Toulouse in France, with the ambition of replicating modern nature's way. This is based upon Basalt. Basalt is not only limited to Iceland. It covers approximately 5% of all land on Earth, but approximately 70%, 70% of the ocean floor. So it definitely is not limited to Iceland, but Iceland is the origin of the research project and the company. So we are now exploring the globe, as we can say. Okay, what world-well ambition then? Wonderful. Well, we have a, it's not a problem that's limited to UAE, US, Japan or Iceland. It's a global problem, so we have to address it like that. Absolutely. So carbon capture, sequestration, you are so-called in-the-value chain project developers. So, Christine, it looks to me that the CarpFix solution of carbon sequestration into soil is pretty universal, right? You're talking about there is a large component of oceans where we can apply this solution as an example. So can it be used also at a point source solution and how your solution is also, in my view, eligible to both compliance markets and voluntary carbon markets. So a dual source of financing. So what will it take to enforce wide adoption of your solution in particular? Yeah, very good question. I don't have the silver bullet, I mean the magic answer here, but in regards to how we are approaching things, yes, this solution that we are offering, we're not saying it is a silver bullet, but as was mentioned before by Annette, we need all the solutions. This solution can be applied on the voluntary market, yes, and it can also be applied on the mandatory market. If you look at my closest examples are European market, you have a trading scheme, ETS, where you have the government that has the stick on the companies. If you don't do this, you have to pay a certain tax or pay a certain fine. However, in the US, you're looking the carrot, where if you do this, you will be incentivized. So it doesn't really matter which method it is, and it will most likely be a combination of both. You mentioned before, yes, we have had the privilege of starting this research in 2006. We incorporated the company three and a half years ago with the ambition to scale up and commercialize. We did receive a huge grant from the European Commission earlier last year, about 115 million euros to build the world's largest mineral storage site, which will be done in Iceland. So it is a combination of subsidizing or grants, but at the same time, the uniqueness of the carfist technology, it is already economical. Just if you look at the entire value chain that we have two commercial operations in Iceland, the capturing, the transport, and the actual mineralization, or the storage by mineralization, is less than $25 per tonne. That's a very, very low number, but at the same time, it's a totally different aspect than others have. We need all the technologies. This is one of them, and our main objective is now to scale up on a global basis and let's say be available because we don't have time. Definitely we don't have time.