 Thank you, Madam Chair. Excellency's Distinguished Delegate. I'm honored to join you today at the Sixth World Telecommunication and ICT Policy Forum. This is the first time that the IAEA participate in this global meeting. As we speak, Madam Chair, we are living through a pandemic. The world is facing immense challenges, climate change, food security, energy access, and the list goes on. The world can tackle these challenges only if you work together, bringing new and sharing new innovative technologies. Ladies and gentlemen, you may know the IAEA more for its work related to safeguards and nuclear energy, but peaceful users of nuclear technology and our work contribute directly to nine of 17 sustainable development goals. And here, artificial intelligence has enormous potential in accelerating safe, secure, and peaceful and sustainable uses of nuclear technologies. This is literally the core of our mandate. This year, we have held a pioneer technical meeting on artificial intelligence for nuclear technology and application, and we are pioneering with ITU and other UN organizations and artificial intelligence for goods. Excellency's artificial intelligence is already applied across various nuclear field. In medicine, for example, it improves diagnosis and treatment of cancer through improved medical imaging interpretation, more accurate treatment plan, and adaptive radiotherapy treatment. Artificial intelligence will play an important role in understanding the long-standing impacts of zoonotic diseases like COVID-19 on health outcomes like health, heart, and lung function. It can also be used to simulate behavior of nuclear reactors to help improve design, performance, safety, and fuel load. It can also help manage environmental, hydrological, and ecological resources by analyzing a huge amount of data, such as those stored in global network of isotope precipitation database run by the agency and the world meteorological organization. It also can be used in radiation technologies, including radiopharmaceutical production and radiation production. However, the transformative power of artificial intelligence also comes with challenges of transparency, data privacy, trust, security, and other ethical concerns as well as regulatory challenges. We can address those issues together if we are seeking open dialogue and collaboration. We look forward to join work with other ITU focused groups in establishing an artificial intelligence for atoms, knowledge sharing platform, as well as in supporting education, training, and community building in this area. I thank you for your time and wish you all a successful forum. Thank you, Madam Chair.