 When you look at the analysis that was done through the IPC, the famine review committee examined as well, the messages were crystal clear, and one of the key messages was that it was urgently important, not just for people to be able to access the calories that they needed, but there was really deep concern about the nature of what was being consumed, right? It's not enough just to eat bread. You need to eat vegetables. You need to have access to proteins. You need to be able to access milk as well, and it's in that context that our emergency animal health interventions and our fodder interventions specifically play such an important role. Those fodder interventions will keep livestock alive, sheep, goats, cattle. It will do that. It will protect those assets for vulnerable households, but actually the most important impact is what it means in terms of access to milk for vulnerable households and for malnourished children. And the estimates that we have using WHO's nutrition standards and guidelines is that the 1,500 metric tonnes of fodder that we plan to bring in that we have funding to procure that is on its way and that we expect is now being distributed, that that can provide milk access for all of Gaza's child population. Here we're talking about children under the age of 10. Part of what's going to be at the heart of preventing family Gaza is dietary diversity. It's not just about the amount of calories that's consumed on a daily basis and this came clearly through in the analysis and so an ability to start producing crops again, an ability to keep livestock and sheep and cattle alive, small ruminants as we call them. About 55% of all of the small ruminants in Gaza have either been slaughtered or killed since the fight started. That's a huge percentage. It means that there are still about 45% of those sheep and goats that are still alive. It's vital that we keep them alive. I talked about the animal fodder as being able to provide enough milk for all of the children under 10 in Gaza. That's the most important statistic. It's also important to note that that same amount of animal fodder we estimate could keep alive the balance of the sheep and goat population that still exists in Gaza. This is vitally important. When we look slightly longer-term, our priority at the moment collectively has to be to prevent famine. As soon as possible, being able to restart agricultural activities is going to be indispensable in Gaza as it is in any context. Keeping animals alive in that context is an obvious and important immediate choice.