 Good afternoon, friends. On the podium, all participants, friends of the conference, CBA 9 is moving on. Coming nearing a closer, we are moving on to CBA 10. But climate change remains one of the central issues of our generation, of our time, of this century. Unfortunately, climate change is here and now and it is affecting the human system and the communities. It is also affecting the ecosystems, the whole governance process of development, environment and climate change use. It is the greatest challenge human beings are facing and this challenge has been recognized virtually by everyone now including the President of the United States who has not been very helpful in the whole negotiation process over the years. However, there are opportunities to be looked into, into the whole climate process and CBA is such an opportunity of accessing the communities and trying to be with them, learn from them, assist technologically with methodology, with various issues and tools and trying to put forward the view of the most vulnerable across the world to the power be it. All communities are being affected right now, but very in degree and in degree of severity. Particularly the most vulnerable communities include a small island state and islands of other states. Coastal communities, pastoralist, migratory people, ice and glacier based populations, countless dependent on ecosystems, forests, agriculture and other land levels. Climate change has come here the whole planetary population but has to be confronted with seriousness, with science and whole climate process is science based policy research leading to action where what we are doing is integral part of that process. On the one of the two major ways of addressing climate change is mitigation and adaptation. We have been more engaged in adaptation, but if we do not mitigate rapidly we will reach the limits to adaptation very fast. Then we move into loss and damage, further into territories where we have not yet. Imagine how drastic that would be. So mitigation in the past, and this morning I said mitigation is the best form of adaptation, has to be done rapidly by the country and by the populations who are evicting host and should be done rapidly. The molecules do not distinguish what it has come from, not that that phosphate, but it has to be reduced. Two degree centigrade is objective and for many studies it shows that we have probably crossed that limit of trying to contain two degree centigrade. So the mitigation failures have led to much greater need for adaptation already. Hence community-based adaptation becomes so central into the whole debate and discussion. The whole issue of IPCC was to address this question and about ten, eleven years ago there was a big conference of IPCC in Fortaleza and the question was what is the dangerous anthropogenic intervention? About 700 scientists worked for 14 in this conference came to the conclusion that scientists cannot answer that question. It is a political process and the politicians must. And the politicians in Copenhagen agreed that two degree centigrade was the limit. But no systems are failing to contain it within that limit. Hence adaptation will raise like a very rapid economic loss beyond our conceptualization right now. One of the understanding of science is as I have said and others, modelling is they use as a tool and they do what is the mean temperature, two degree centigrade per second. Mean behavior shifts in precipitation. But it is not the mean, it is the extremes that are going to hit the population most. It is not the round the year, it is the second day where the water is one meter high or two meter higher. That is going to make the difference between life and death. That is making going to make the difference between population, moving or not. People's right at this point in time is what IPCC predicts about 300 million people in this place by the end of the century. We see few displaced people in the Mediterranean Sea. We see some in the Middle East claiming themselves to be states where we do not have the laws, migration hasn't really started. And we have studied migration for a long time and one of the basic principle learning is that people do not want to move. They don't know how to live their home easily. So they are forced to move. And what that happens, the whole stability, all intergovernmental process is based on governments and nation states. Those nation states are being challenged and will be challenging also. The whole climate issue has been taken with far more rigor and vigor than our governments have done so far. So, as we call here, adaptation must. There must be resources for adaptation and that has to be done rather fast. We, the severe community, will continue our journey. We started a bit earlier than 2004 or 2005. We had the first world conference on communities adaptation, severe one. Since then we have moved to various countries. Tanzania, Vietnam, Nepal, Kenya, we are going back to Bangladesh again. So, on behalf of the organizers, the co-organizers, IIT, BCS, and for this occasion our co-organizers will act. On all of their behalf, I welcome you to Bangladesh. Sometime in action, I am not giving a date yet. In Dharka, in Bangladesh, I will let you know as time passes. On the theme issue, we have been talking about, we, the community, engage people for all. In Asia, Africa, there are very few totally exclusive urban people. What we call is rural urban continuum. They have a holiday facility, they all go. So, it's a continuous process. So, our definition of urban is based on rural urban continuum. The resource when it comes to population in a climate change world, that we have done the studies of 9 countries where we have tried to. So, it's a much larger issue. So, those of you who are here think that, oh, I don't do urban world connections. And there are immediate connections, there are remote connections with urban issues. So, always think, open, we will keep it very open. It will be a learning exercise similar to this and we will learn from here. There has been significant difference between what we learnt in Vietnam to the modality how we organise the conference here. But there have been far higher interactions, much more integrative system, more space, more opportunity. And we will try and improve on it, hopefully, if we get your input as Salif has requested to set quickly. So, we will be on it and we will take that message, those messages forward. It also only leaves me to say that thanks to AACS for all the fantastic backup support and to the Indian government for all the support that you have given, Salif, for virtually holding as the additive to the conference and doing all the hard work and colleagues of IAED and Miss A.S. who have put in all the work behind the scene where I am Salif and then we are much more on the front. So, it has been on the journey. The journey goes on. It is the milestone. We again move on and we move towards Dhaka from here. Welcome to all of you. Hope to see you in Dhaka in April 2016. Thank you very much.