 Bertrand de Lanoux, many thanks for coming to WPC TV. You are representative of Total in China. And China, of course, is one of the world's growing energy consumers, and also one of the world's greatest polluters. How do you see the energy market developing, particularly in this region? Well, I think you're right to point that China is one of the biggest consumer now. We surpassed the US in a few years time in terms of consumption. It's the biggest consumer of coal, the biggest producer of coal as well, and the biggest emitter of CO2. Now, the question about China is that how soon they can control their emission? Today, the most problematic thing in China is not CO2. It's PM 2.5. That is the particulates from coal? From coal, from industry, from construction, from everything. And when China is so much mobilized today on pollution, they're mobilized on PM 2.5, not yet on CO2 emission. Although for the first time, they've been committing, at the APEC meeting a few months ago, on capping at one point of time the emission of CO2, which is a big step. And they have a big program envisaged for nuclear energy, is that right? They have a program for everything. They are the one investing the most on new energy today. So it's nuclear, of course, but it's also solar, it's also wind farms, it's hydroelectricity. So the problem with China is that they're not yet fully developed countries and they will need to have more energy. The question is where this energy is going to come. They will still have to produce or to consume. People said 60% more energy in 2030 compared to today. So this energy has to come from something. If not, you are preventing the country to develop and that's, they cannot accept that. Presumably, a lot of this energy will come from total. But does total have growing plans for alternative energy for solar, for example? What we're trying to do in China is obviously trying to develop our own business. Also, it's always difficult for a foreign oil and gas company to do business in China. The market is controlled by the big Chinese corporation now. And it's not fully open. So we're trying to do what we can to develop our business there. But also what we've been trying to do is bring them more gas. So we are drilling for gas. We are going to try and see if there is anything we can do on the shell gas as well within China. But also we're bringing them a lot of LNG. From our resources, we have outside China. And that's also part of the energy mixture China wants to do is reduce the coal and increase the gas side, which as you know is far less polluting and emitting than coal. Then on the solar side, you know that now Total is one of the biggest solar companies who affiliates SunPower. And SunPower started doing business also in China. But that's also a difficult thing because China is the biggest producer of solar cells. So there is tough competition, although the products are not exactly the same. So what SunPower is trying to bring to China is really the highly concentrated solar cells. Well, I wish you the very best of luck. Bertrand de Lanoux, thank you so much for coming here. Thank you, thank you.