 Welcome everyone. This is a tremendous day for South Australia. I've been fighting for many many years for us to join the great wine capitals of the world and I think when we joined up in July last year we were very felt very pleased to be welcomed into such a privileged group of cities around the world. The collaboration that will happen in the wine industry will have at many different levels but education is so important. If we look at someone like Peter Gago, ducks out at Roseworthy, that Adelaide University connection that has been there for so long and I think we've always done really well in the winemaking and in the vineyard sort of area of research. Now it gives me great pleasure to present Peter Gago with this certificate as our great wine capitals global network ambassador. Look truly honored to be an ambassador for such an amazing enterprise. You know when you combine tourism with education and business enterprise how can you go wrong? From a South Australian winemaking perspective our market yes is South Australia as a subset of Australia but gee big things are happening offshore and that's where we spend most of our time. Now these 10 cities Adelaide included of course I'll be I think across about four or five of them in the next four or five months so my role isn't too onerous we're there anyway but now we have some incredible contacts and isn't that what a global network is all about? We create opportunity for others business is all about the two-way street everyone wins and if we do this properly Adelaide will win the University of Adelaide will win the wine industry wins. Thank you very very much for this truly great honor of the message or all shit thank you. I think for the University and our students primarily this formalizes a whole lot of interactions around student mobility and exchange so having students travel from one country one region to another is a fantastic way of exploring global opportunities in wine business probably behind that a whole lot of opportunities around joint research collaboration particularly given our different positions on the globe how we manage our supply chains how we manage our brands location close to China their location close to Europe and new market opportunities so this is a really significant event for us I think for South Australian wine business this opens up a whole range of opportunities for collaboration at a very small and very small primary level with small producers trying to understand and exchange best practice I think the French producers would love to learn a bit more about Australian wine production and I'm sure vice versa so this is a wonderful opportunity for both sides because one piece I would say which is at the moment missing a bit in one business education is providing to our students a real international experience so they do have it you know with little time visiting discovering one region but what we're trying to work in this cooperation project is something much more deeper where actually the learning experience from the beginning could be based on two very important high positioning wine region around the world Bordeaux and Adelaide very positive learning experience and this is why I think Bordeaux and Adelaide in that regard are very much complementary and there is a lot to learn from one to another