 So good morning ladies and gentlemen and friends, it's a real pleasure and a honor for me to be here especially as for an in this panel, especially as for now three decades I've been involved in agricultural production and development throughout the world. But also because in the past years with the board of Danone, I've been introduced to other dimensions of what we used to call the food revolution. And we have here to address the very important issue of food security, a wonderful panel whom I will introduce a little bit later. But let's start by saying that even though numbers, different numbers may be floating, this year we have had about 20 countries introducing partial or full bonds on agricultural exports in the world, which of course is a very roaring signal and which is undermining trust, which is at the very bottom of any security system in the world. And among those countries, you don't have the smallest, one of the latest one has been India, red rice. India is a major exporter of rice. It's about, if I'm not mistaken, around 25% of worldwide exports. And this is underlying global fear of a shortage of production in the world, which will, I think, address whether it is a fantasy or a reality, especially on the long run, but it's also showing how political this market remains. It's not just about exchanging goods. It's about being in the international relations. And I think that our panelists will help us understanding how economics and politics interplay there. What is also very, what has been also very striking in the very past years is to see those agricultural issues raising as major environmental issues, not only because climate change is affecting agricultural production, of course, but also because agriculture has emerged as a major carbon emitter worldwide and is part of the climate change strategy for the goal. And let me end up by highlighting also the fact that behind or at the root of many of our challenges is the poverty issues. More and more across the world, extreme poverty is aligned with rural areas, farmers, poor farmers. And as we go and average wealth in the world increases, poverty concentrates in those rural areas and hence we have a major social problem there. So one major issue for our panel is whether we'll have an agricultural war or not, or a water war. Yes, no, this is part of the types of issues that we'll discuss them. And it's very important that we can do it because after all, those agricultural issues tend to be addressed only when major crisis occurred. The last time we had hot debates around those issues was in 2007, 2008, when we had similar problems arising and then afterwards the kind of political tension to those issues dropped. And of course now is reviving. So let's try maybe to restart a conversation around those issues that can last and be able to address one of the most structural important issues in the world. And that will address from the changing demands side as well as the changing production side. So as I told you, we have an incredible, talented and knowledgeable panel to address these issues. Let me start with Minister Mariam Almueri, who is the Minister in charge of climate change and environment of the United Arab Emirates, but also is in charge of food security. A very interesting policy association and Minister Almueri will close our panel and therefore have an opportunity not only to share her messages, but also to react if she wishes to what will have been addressed before. We'll start the panel with two very senior academic and policy makers and advisor, Mr. Maximo Torreo-Coulen, who is on the screen with us, Chief Economist of FAO, and then Pierre Jaquet, President of the Global Development Network and Professor at the Ecole Nationale de Pont des Chaussées and his most prestigious incarnation as life of former Chief Economist of the French Remainty Agency in shared years. And then we'll turn to Mr. Chris Narmouti, who is currently Associate Professor of Agribusiness at Bogor University, but used to be Vice Minister of Trade and Vice Minister of Agriculture in Indonesia and he will be able to provide us with an Asian perspective on global issues. Unfortunately, one of our panelists has dropped, so you will be a woman. I'm just sharing that with the ones in this room who complain about gender parity, which we try to implement in this panel. So our panelists will have a little bit more time to share, but I kindly ask them not to go beyond 10 minutes so that we can have the time to draw also from the experience of very knowledgeable people in this room. And I expect, for instance, that people like Jean-Marie Pogam, who is the Deputy Director General of WTO in short of agriculture, will be sitting there, but also people like Lionel Zansou will provide additional perspective in our debate.