 Today, we're coming to the end of the fourth day of the 12th International Conference on Community-Based Adaptation, CBA 12, being held in Lillongwe in Malawi. And this today, the last day, is actually also the Africa Regional NAP export, NAP being the national adaptation planning process that all countries are doing, particularly the least developed countries, with support from the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change Secretariat. So this is their event today. And the rest of the CBA participants who were here for the last three days are also participating and providing input. So it's very much a bottom-up communities meeting with the top-down government officials, carrying out the NAP and exchanging views. Over the last three days, we had some very, very interesting interactions. We had a number of marketplaces and skills shares to get people to interact and get to know each other and learn from each other. And then we had a series of workshops in three different work streams, looking at climate finance at the local level, how to increase that, looking at how we can get evidence that can influence policymaking, so evidence from the ground that can then be used to influence policymaking at the national and global levels. And then finally, looking at the role of technology and how technology can help enhance adaptation at the local level as well. All three work streams developed pitches for potential funding. And at the end, we had a Dragonsten format for each of the pitches to be presented to a set of investors who gave their comments on the potential viability of finding funding for those pitches. It was not a real Dragonsten exercise, but nevertheless it was quite an interesting way of preparing projects and proposals. And then we had yesterday a major plenary discussion on the issue of gender and climate through a Talanoa dialogue. Talanoa is a Pacific term for consultative and participatory dialogues and discussions that the Fiji and presidency of the COP 23 last year initiated. And these Talanoa dialogues are now taking place all over the world. And we'll culminate in COP 24 in December in pulling together views from around the world from all sectors. And the Talanoa dialogue in CBA was led by Mary Robinson, who is a high-level representative of the UN Secretary General on climate. And our views from the local level, from the community level on the Talanoa dialogue on gender and climate in particular will feed into the global Talanoa dialogue under the presidency of Fiji in COP 24 in Katowice. So finally, we are hoping to get our messages across not just within the grassroots level community of practice that has grown on CBA or within the countries themselves, but at the global level at the conference of parties next year, next December, we will be bringing that message to the Development and Climate Days event. And then we hope over the next few years to continue this process of taking voices from the ground to the global through the CBA conferences.