 Thank you for inviting me. It is a very pleasure working with you on this. And I think the experiences that we are developing here in Cambodia are absolute relevance and also a slightly different. This is a project I would like to present which is focusing on sustainable landscapes and ecotourism. It is focusing on a landscape of protected areas in Cambodia, which you see here on the map. It is basically globing more than 12 protected areas in Decadema Mountains in the Tondesap and in the western part of the country. And the Ministry of Economy and Finance has envisaged the development of ecotourism but also the partnership between communities and private sector not only on tourism but also when it comes to sustainable businesses, conservation friendly activities as the key principle for engagement in the landscapes with ecotourism certainly in the lead and because ecotourism or tourism in general has been the leading income of export services more than 90% of export services have been coming pre-COVID from tourism. The operation is funded through the World Bank up to this alone of more than $50 million is the objective to establish a model for environmental social economic sustainability for the protected areas. So this is not about conservation, it is about sustainable development in the landscape. So now this is I think one of the most important messages here it's about the collaboration between ministries. We're looking at the spatial concept, we're looking at the concept that tries to organize ecotourism around the vision, a spatial vision but also between a sector, cross-sectoral vision. And this is quite a complex arrangement. It is led the destination manager is in this case the Ministry of Environment very closely working with the Ministry of Tourism. However, when it comes to infrastructure development, rural roads, wash infrastructure and others, what infrastructure we are working with the Ministry of Rural Development. And then also at the sub-national level with different entities. So that demands development of a common vision on where we will take such an engagement. And we come to this and what we are currently doing. So the areas of investment and most of it is providing is improving the enabling environment. Basically the conditions for private sector engagement but also providing the infrastructure for ecotourism development. Second, then as well, rural roads, improvement access, et cetera. And then also I don't want to put this first but certainly where we started this was the improvement of the protected areas themselves with the zoning demarcation and taking care of the destination itself. And when we started the project two years ago, there was no, none of the protected areas where I zoned or demarcated that that is that has been the first steps moving forward. So thankfully the Cardamon Mountains hasn't, we have not started, we didn't need to start from scratch. It is a sizable pool of ready, ready to small-scale domestic and foreign investors, but also large-scale. At present, there are eight large-scale investments and 35 small-scale ecotourism development project. Most of them community-based ecotourism project that have been supported by donors or private initiatives over the years. However, those community-based ecotourism projects have not been financially very sustainable and that's why also the push from the Ministry of Economy find us to waive, to find ways and how to bring together private investments and community-based investments as a concept, as a model, as a principle of engagement, connecting those around common products and zones and networks throughout over the timeline of the project. The Cardamon Mountains has a huge wealth of valuable locations, untapped potentials, waterfalls. It's the longest wild-elephant trail in the world, if you believe it or not, it's incredible wealth of potential destinations that are still to be developed. And there is a sizable and growing market for tourism-protected areas. We know that this is globally the case, but only COVID-19 demonstrated actually how much really in terms of demand from the national market, that's national middle class really going and discovering for the first time protected areas as a tourism destination. And to be also very lucky that there is a large community already engaged in tourism services that are very much connected to Angkor Wat and because of tourism, and certainly there is a wealth of operators. However, during COVID as well, these operators have been eroded quite significantly, and certainly there is much room for recovery certainly. But this is the moment where we thought and it's very important to develop a new vision on what we do, how we position ourselves again in this new world of post-COVID recovery and how we improve the conditions to attract the necessary investments to move forward. So the big challenge is certainly is here that although we had a number of national tourists discovering these areas, we had the internationally involved tourists could not only partially compensate the income of these community-based ecotourism activities. And certainly that has been a major, major issue for most of the workers and laborers and entrepreneurs in the space that had to close most of those activities. So now it's in two weeks, we're gonna open, Cambodia will open the borders again. And certainly this is the moment where we have to position ourselves again. Second, the protected area tourism in Cambodia is not yet clearly defined as lack of capacity and cross-sectoral engagement and lack of standards and guidelines and infrastructure is still very basic. And but most of all is that there's a lack of a combination and plans for tourism in the predicted areas. And there is a lack of common vision between park authorities, communities, regional authorities, private sector, et cetera, entrepreneurs. It's leading to a largely to an impact on natural resource management, encroachment and other things, but basically affecting the destination itself. So the first thing that needed to be done in this case and it's very important to bring everybody together and providing this destination vision and investment plans, which has been a long-term process with starting as a market and product diagnostic where we are and now moving to the preferred destination vision and ultimately to a detailed action plan that will guide as well early next year, the major investments, roads, et cetera, road infrastructure, gates, but also the investments information centers, investments in trails and the capacity needs and so on and so forth. These strategic investments that we are currently already developing to attract investors to create this enabling environments have been focusing very much on the improvement of the regulations. To streamline the current regulatory processes already for investments in ecotourism, Cambodia luckily already had this kind of certain concessions, we're not calling concession, but providing the space for investors in this space but for at community level, but also private investors. However, those regulatory process have been eroded and not very clear from the outside. So activities that included certainly application procedures, fees, revenue sharing mechanisms, roles of the government agencies and how they collaborate and also how to apply in the process to get to those project approval processes have had to be reorganized. And this is currently in the making and also will come out after the consultation as the private sector again. Second is the road infrastructure planning and the wash infrastructure. And that is very essential, currently identifying where the priorities are, refurbishing the road infrastructure and then also defining what kind of infrastructure, what kind of road infrastructure we will need. And that also learning process because roads are not roads and we need to have roads in protected areas and ecotourism and then also water supply. It needs a complete new vision on how typically these roads are being implemented in Cambodia. Moving forward also with the business development and also with the communication of ecotourism, vision then aligning ourselves as well this specific branding of the Cardinal Mountains and protected areas within the context of the broader communication strategy of tourism in Cambodia. We are, what we are working towards is establishing these models for larger and smaller ecotourism investments and operators now allow these partnerships between communities and private investors to happen and certainly facilitating this broker, this honest broker ship role as well that the ministry that the destination manager also needs to play in order to protect the interests of the communities but also to guide this private investors where to go. Second also to connect these Cardemons with other tourist products within the country, connecting Angkor with Cardemons and the Tonlissat with the coast, networks, trails, operators, connectivity on and then physically and also conceptually and enhance the business management promote this responsible travel behavior that is lacking so far and only partially being implemented. And ultimately create these tourism products align with the protected areas very specifically and here we heard a lot about the products that you are presenting very similar the activities, how the livelihood activities within the protected areas and how they can become tourist destination, tourist products is essential and it's certainly something that we are working towards. Just the last slide and I think it's very interesting as well, we produced the role of the World Bank is not only the financial but also the provider of ideas and bringing best practices and also supporting analytical work in this context. And we just issued the enabling ecotourism development on how to improve the enabling environment the regulations in Cambodia on ecotourism and we are now investing as well in the regional demand assessment focusing on Chinese and national tourism and specifically focusing on Lao in Cambodia with this in the recovery certainly the most important unknown how the Chinese tourism will be positioned themselves over the next five to 10 years in these countries and what kind of products they would like to see and then also combining the coastal ecotourism vision aligned with the cardamons and detom this up in order to fill this void as well on the marine protected areas and providing a larger vision. So these are the analytical pieces that we are producing this year but we continue providing this advisory role over time and also working very closely with Lao and other countries in the context, in the regional context. I would like to thank you for the space that you provided us here. This I find a very interesting way how to frame tourism in the context of protected areas over to you.