 So my topic is to talk about Japan as the test market for the world for the aging society This is the fastest aging population in world history if you look at these statistics here 25% of the Japanese population is already 65 22 million which is the population of my country Australia is already over 70 and 700,000 people roughly turned 70 last year and with the baby boom coming along we will suddenly find this is accelerating So how is Japan going to? Resolve this issue because this is critical for the future success of this country and in my opinion For the success of many other countries as we go forward with the aging population I'm going to show you a whole series of products bang bang bang like this, which I think was going to blow your mind Let's go so very prosaic the biggest Market for disposable diapers in Japan is now Adults not babies. It's far beyond the baby market. We have now segmented targets like this This is for adults who can still walk. We have these for people who have Alzheimer's They have a different type of diaper, right? We have this group who are rehabilitating They can still walk but they need diapers to go up and down So this is a brand-new market category, which is now I think will take the world by storm as we get further along Honda coming out with a new thing to help old older workers for example Have trouble getting down and getting up again, right? So this means you can go there all day every day now doing that sort of stuff As we get a little older we have trouble not being 15 year old playing with cell phones And you don't need a PhD in cell phonology to use this right? It's a very simple and this is the latest Android coming out in a couple of weeks Right, we all would like as we get old to be like this if we could right This is This is a serious group of ladies who could still do the splits at 66 I mean, it's pretty impressive But in Japan the biggest concern Everybody has is someone has is anyone is 35 40 years of age has an adult parent Relative or somebody who is Netakiri we say in Japanese was either Bedridden or coming on to Alzheimer's what we want to do if we can is to be pin pin Corori We say in Japanese right pin pin means being healthy and Corori means you roll over and die That's so you want to go there. You don't want to die with tubes up your nose, right? So that's what we're talking about here. So It's very important. So what's happened is for example, this professor who's using brain imaging Came up with a learning therapy and he published the book on this Believe we can slow down the onset of Alzheimer's, right and Nintendo took this up ran with this and Created the brain training game which took 30 50 million copies throughout the world This is now being tested in clinical trials versus traditional medical products and we're waiting to see which one's gonna win Now this is a bit of a complicated chart But essentially the red one says this is the young boys who kill themselves in traffic accidents under 25 years of age Right the bottom one in blue is a number of people now over 65 and that's now overtaken the young boys so more people over 65 are dying in traffic accidents than we find in young children Now just think for a moment then here We are in a nation of 35 40 million people over the age of 65 70 with almost no reflexes eyesight gone Possible onset of Alzheimer's and maybe wearing the latest doesable tie-up for those who drive cars and You have a vision of what's going to happen in the future, right? What we're seeing here is coming out of this brain training stuff is Toyota and this son All these other people now coming up with new products, which will stop these problems And you'll have a whole new series of cars coming out of Japan We already have already the world leadership in that area, right? Country areas, what do we do with the small cities? They're now test cities which are tying in with wireless and everything else good Japan is one of the world leaders in this field Intelligent toilets right here. We have a whole toilet at home We have the ability to test your blood pressure test your wee wee take the blood sugar and send it back to the hospital Right and as you get old you can sit down like this But you can't get up. So what do we do? We have this new machine which pushes you back up again and of course blood pressure measures have to be fashionable So where we go? This is another area. We can now teach people to walk again within six months after being Nettokiti bedridden from Stroke and we're getting 70% of people are now walking again Robotalk beds wheelchairs controlled by brainwaves ultimately trying to get Robots controlled by waves right para paro the furry seal He doesn't do poo poo. He doesn't bite and therefore. He's a very nice thing to have in the old people's home Target is aging society for the rest of Asia China with one child policy is going to be two to three hundred million people In the less than six to eight years, right? It was a big big market and finally just to before we finish Crisis is in Chinese and two characters in Japanese danger and opportunity I think there's huge opportunities in this area and finally if we think we all have to go eventually Japan has now invented a safe space a six-story graveyard. You get cremated push it in and Round you go and then if your friends want to visit you put an ATM card in up comes a thing You say thank you very much. Thank you very much