 What I do particularly appreciate about the SDGs is this, you know, the primacy or the priority that it gives to focusing on gender equality in women's empowerment. And it's done that very much from a rights-based perspective as opposed to an instrumentalist perspective in the sense that gender equality in women's empowerment is something that we as society and the global community needs to be committed towards and that it is a goal in its own right and we shouldn't just be concerned with that because it will lead to other goals. And I think that sends a really powerful message to the way in which forests and forestry issues are being defined. Increasingly what we see is that gender issues are entering the forestry realm but very much so in terms of what gender equality in women's empowerment will bring to forests. You know, questions are still being asked about what is the role of women's contribution towards deforestation, towards sustainable forest management. And while there is momentum for change, but you know, there is definitely not enough emphasis in my view on how forests can contribute towards gender equality in women's empowerment too. So by having a global development agenda that really highlights and prioritizes the importance of gender equality in women's rights on its own terms and not because it will lead to other instrument of benefits, I think it has a lot to add to the way in which we understand and appreciate the value of forests both for people and for the environment.