 I'm Andrew Norton, Director of IID and I'm here to say a few words to introduce our new five-year strategy, Make Change Happen. We're excited about this. We've worked hard on the background to this, analysing the areas, the big global challenges where we feel IIDs should be active and can make a difference. We've consulted a lot with partners and stakeholders who we work with throughout the world. So there are five big global challenges around which we frame the strategy. One is increasing inequality. Another is the climate crisis. A third one is the global crisis of biodiversity loss or the assault on the natural world. Then there's the question of how urban transitions can be shaped in a period when most of the world's urban growth will be in the poorest countries with limited capacity. And finally, looking at the role of markets. Unsustainable markets are an issue. How can we turn them towards promoting green transitions that the world needs to see? In those areas we'll be looking at a range of things that we feel IID can make a real difference on. One is getting money where it matters, looking at how finance can be delivered to the frontline where people are dealing with the impacts of biodiversity loss and climate change. That's a key priority for us which runs across all of our programme areas. We will be driving forward our work with the least developed countries which IID has been known for that partnership over the last 20 years, particularly in the space of the global climate negotiations. We're now expanding that to work which looks at the governance of the high seas in the process looking at how biodiversity in the open oceans can best be protected. The LDCs run the risk that they don't get the voice that poor countries need in that process to protect poor coastal communities in particular. That will be a major focus for us. We'll also be looking at the issue of how urban transitions in a world where urbanisation will be concentrated in the poorest countries can be shaped both to be inclusive, to be beneficial for the societies where they take place, but also to be inclusive of mobile populations, whether refugees or migrants. And finally we'll be looking at the changes that need to occur in markets. How can private and public sector actors work together to promote the transitions to a more sustainable development pathway that we urgently need? We're committed to working to increase the resilience of the poorest communities, whether through working on land rights, through working on planning systems or through enhancing their voice in the policy processes that matter most to them. It's been a great experience working with IID staff and our key stakeholders to identify the areas where the special strengths that this organisation has can really make a difference from the local level to the global. We'd love you to look at the strategy to study the ideas that are presented here and to get back to us with ideas of the ways that we could work with you. So please join with us to make change happen.