 Just a quick thing there, so Army Co, I only got 15 minutes so I won't talk about the Army Co business, which is a great business, it's going to take me long in the 15 minutes to do that, but we process 80% of the Australian arm and growers, not the volume, so we represent about 30% of the volume of the current Australian industry, but I just really wanted to share with you today because if you get out the Agricultural Commodities Book, that's in your pack there, and turn to page 91, I can actually give you some red-hot the press, red-hot off the press information and updates about the armed industry. This is probably a unique opportunity to do some spruiking about arms because it's now the number one valued horticultural export of Australia, so I really just wanted to step you through our industry perspective as a director of the Armed Board of Australia, and the information provided in the presentation today has been sourced from the Army Board, and I see Wayne down the front here, so Wayne certainly supplies a lot of the export and import data. So where are we in the globe? We're 8% of global production. As Brian said, there was a bit of a rally which I'll talk to later on in the mid-2000s, which have driven the arm and production up to the levels that we saw in 2015, which was a record crop. Australia sits at number two in global production, but we're a key southern hemisphere producing country, and unfortunately over the weekend Spain has spent a traditional crop in Spain for probably over 100 years, but that crop got heavily frosted over the weekend, so their production is going to be fairly well decimated for this coming year, which is I shouldn't say it, that's probably good for us. So it is a globally competitive crop, and again, just highlighting where the industry sits. So in 2015 was a milestone year for an industry which is well over 80 years old. So for those people who don't know, Armands were an early settler in South Australia, and it was a cottage industry for six decades. It really started here to strap and become a bit more mechanised, a bit more competitive as far as crop yields through adoption of irrigated crop cropping. So here we are in 2015, or we just rolled over 2016 today, basically, for the stats. So we produced 80,000 5mm tons of almond kernels, and we exported 59,000 tonnes of almonds to over 40 different countries around the globe, and that was valued at $747 million. So Australia's most valuable horticultural crop, and it's 36% of the total sales between the other horticultural crops. In total we hit the billion dollar mark for the 2015 year. So it was very strong domestic sales and exports, we've shipped over a billion dollars, which is a great milestone for the almond industry. Probably not going to happen again this year, but we'll take the credit 2015. There's approximately 200 almond growers really concentrating on the eastern seaboard in the Marindarling Basin, South Australia, Victoria, New South Wales, and also producing almond orchards in western Australia. So we have 4,000 acres, or 30,000 hectares. For those people in the arm industry and investors, it's a very heavily capital intensive crop to start off with, but it does bring rewards if you're a patient person. So I guess what we're talking about this morning sessions was that investment dollar and being patient to get that return. And certainly almonds have provided that return. So we're looking at a bit of a rally of plantings happening over the next three years, which will take production to that 130,000 ton mark by 2025. And we basically know this is an industry because we have our own budwood centre. So the nurseries for the almond trees provide orders to get to plants, orders through the ABA, which will virus index. So you can get a pretty good matrix of what's going in the ground and when. We're a high water user, but I guess again, this morning session is all about returns. Almonds do provide a significant return on your water use currently. Very efficient in that water use. Technology has really enabled better crop production through drip irrigation, and soil monitoring system. So water is such a crucial input into the almonds that everybody's adopted well best practice as far as their orchards are concerned. There's a again, we got highlighted again this morning, we have got a water system, which probably enables a little bit of forecasting on where the value of water and all that sort of things, which is a key input cost. Unlike California, which are largely unmeeted, might have a pumping cost, but they actually pay for the water they extract out of the ground if it's on your property. So they're going through those dynamics at the moment. With the help of HIA, there's a heavy investment in the almond industry, particularly on drought-proofing orchards of tomorrow, a lot of high density plantings also happening. So there's better rootstocks, better varieties, self-fertility, which is a bit of a game-changer for probably the smaller family farm. So all those sort of things are happening at the moment. So we're looking at a $7 million investment going forward in regard to a lot of those production trials. So where are we heading? So record of $80,000 for a tonne in 2015. What was significant about that is the economics of it. So this year Armour Grower's got a record farm gate price. So it's great when you've got a high yielding crop, pretty good quality matched by record prices, certainly changes the whole economic landscape for those growers. The 2016 crop, which has currently been harvested, is estimated to be down on the record crop of last year. Brian sort of touched on it. There was a significant amount of growth happening in the industry which brought it to the next level of production, I guess the next level of something out of horticultural visibility that the industry gets today. During the 2006-89 period there was significant plantings, mostly by MIS schemes. I think the real value of the arm industry is that those orchards even though they may have become distressed orchards, as in MIS schemes falling over, did get undertaken under new ownership structures and are still producing high quality almonds today. So that's really helped us become a bit more of a choice of origin for a lot of our export markets. Again, there's mostly mature industry, so we haven't got too much new production to come in to play over the next couple of years. But I think you'll see a step up in production probably prior to how we're sort of forecasting because certainly a lot more high density, more trees per hectare being planted than the traditional planting spaces. So where we're heading, again, record crop 2015 slightly down in 2016, again money through a pollination issue and 2017 we should be another record year and the trees are in good health when you drive around the different growing regions and certainly there's certainly good potential for 2017 showing on the trees as far as growth and health goes. What's great about the industry is free labour efficient. So it's all mechanically harvested. A lot of people, not even a lot of our key customers, don't actually realise that almond is actually a ground harvested product. So we have these Mad Max type equipment that goes down through the orchards which shake the almonds to the orchard floor and then they're basically swept up, picked up and stockpiled. So for a very high value crop they're proven to be very robust in the way that they are harvested and processed. And I think that's the real key for being globally competitive is that you need something that's basically non-perishable, very hardy and it's got mechanically harvested. It's also a very versatile product. So all the different things that you process, we don't call it a waste stream we call it reclaimed. So a lot of the product is then reclaimed and then value added. So almonds are certainly a number of eating occasions per day that you're consuming almonds in. Whether it's a breakfast cereal, almond milk now if you get a bit romantic at night you could use a bit of almond oil but for cooking and baking it's a gluten free choice which most people start to move to. So a very versatile product and very waste efficient from even the Harlan Shell which is a residual from that primary process. It all goes to stock feed. So there's a number of revenue streams for the product. Because of that versatility it's the number one product for new product development. So just in Australia alone last year there's 212 new products that were launched utilizing almonds. And who eats almonds because they're healthy in the room? What other reasons would you eat almonds? They taste alright or crunchy? Certainly it's a really well researched commodity and almonds certainly deliver the health benefits and hopefully through changes at Fezance recently almonds will be one of the few that can actually make pretty good health claims on a packet because the research is there to back it up. Whoops. Food safety is another major one that Jim will probably talk about. The vegetable industry was sort of a major lettuce issue at the retailer so in that industrial retail level food safety becomes more and more important to make sure the consumer is protected from any harmful pathogen. So our industry again is tooled up to make sure we're meeting the needs of the retailers, our industrial users and overseas markets as far as those micro issues or even MRLs, chemical levels. So not only is it a major export crop we've also been able to successfully grow through some good marketing promotions for Australian almonds so domestic sales have also increased 38% in the last 5 years and now the price of almonds has declined for the 2016 year. Hopefully we can see almonds get a little bit more special during the year at key consumption times. But it is a champion for 2015 as far as horticultural exports are concerned. $747 million of value was exported after 2015 year which is 142% increase and where we were 5 years ago. So 72% of the crop was exported last year. A lot of work's been done. The industry is very collaborative in the way it markets its product or really get that market access opportunity. We do export to over 40 different countries and probably more take home message is all about persistence. So we're an 80 year old plus industry but we just keep fighting up to the same markets first to say that we grow almonds in Australia now we're saying our almonds are food safe, high quality it should be a major choice compared to the USA. So certainly the recent FTAs are going to help drive demand for Australian almonds even further. So we join the exhibit Australian almonds under the Australian almond banner which is again pretty unique to our industry. You probably wouldn't get four or five processes sitting on stand in many other horticultural agricultural businesses but it works for us at this point in time and it's really helped consolidate our industry to date. I just want to really finalise the key fundamental to returns for almonds is really our dollar. So whatever happens in the US is really important. Obviously they are the price setter and we're essentially a price taker apart from we can play the quality counter seasonal aspect. But that 2011 or 2013 certainly had an impact on our grow returns and we've seen a decline in the dollar over the last two years which has really brought a lot more value back to Australian almond growers. And finally it's a great product, I think it ticks a lot of the boxes that Australian horticulture needs. It is globally competitive well-established export markets already. It's counter seasonal almonds are all across the California valley there so to me it's got a little bit of risk in it whereas Australia is a little bit more scattered as far as our production hubs are very labour efficient it's water efficient because we're adopted well as best practice as far as your irrigation and nutrition systems. It's robust so we don't have any out turn issues in overseas markets with almond's going off. It's versatile it's healthy, it's a very high value crop even with our prices declining this year. At this stage we don't know what's going to happen to California during air blue and ultimately it gives you a great return on your land but it gives you a great return on your water. It's got a proven track record. Now to go to sneak it in. Yeah that's great thank you.