 My talk is also not as awe-inspiring as that of Minister Pulgarbidal, but it is no less informative. So if you will allow me to share with you some of the initiatives we are doing in the forestry sector in relation to the teams of this summit. We in the Philippines have been very successful in degrading our forest. Our forest is now down to 7.2 million hectares or 24% of our land area, one of the lowest forest cover in Southeast Asia. But we have started to recover the forest that we lost. To stop further depletion of our forest, our president has imposed a logging ban in all natural forest nationwide in 2011. The first in our history. Together with intensified enforcement, we apprehended 25.5 million board feet of illegally processed and illegally cut forest padak since 2011. We filed more than 1,200 cases in court the past three years with 186% convicted and counting. As a result, the number of illegal logging hotspots in our country was reduced by 84% from 197 hotspots to only 31. Shown on the screen is the spatial representation of the hotspots before and after the log ban. We will further reduce these hotspots until there is none. From the confiscations, we have been able to produce more than 146,000 school chairs and repaired more than 300 school buildings. Before, we sell what we confiscate through public auctions. However, suspected illegal lagers were the ones winning the auctions. To expand our forest cover, our president established in 2011 the biggest reparistation program in our history, the National Greening Program. We intend to plant 1.5 billion trees in 1.5 million hectares in six years. We will plant more trees in six years than what we planted the past 50 years. This is less than what they do here in Indonesia, but it is already our biggest. This program intends to address poverty, food supply, biodiversity and climate change. For the past three years, we have planted more than 683,000 hectares. This is equivalent to what we planted the previous 23 years. This year, our target is to plant 200 million trees in 400,000 hectares. By the end of the year, we would have planted more than 1 million hectares. Aside from the benefits from additional forests, the program has so far employed more than 168,000 persons in upland and rural communities. The program also provided food crops and cash crops to the communities such as fruit trees, coffee, kakao, rubber and others. Reparistation is no longer the exclusive domain of our ministry. It is now a convergence program among the environment and natural resources, agriculture, agrarian reform, local government, education and other agencies. We believe that we are now on the road to sustainable landscapes with this convergence. By the end of the program, we expect to reverse our forest situation whereby we will then have more forest areas than done degraded areas. And we will increase our forest cover from 24% of our land area to 30%. Our new forest would eventually absorb about 28 million tons of carbon every year. This will help us achieve carbon neutrality. In addition, we estimate that about half of the total budget of the national greening program, about 30 billion pesos from our national budget or about 682 million U.S. dollars, will go directly to the communities through jobs and income. This will contribute to inclusive growth especially in the upland and rural areas. We also impose state governance standards in our program. Our national greening programs, community-based, meaning the communities, are the ones contracted to undertake the reparistation. We grow our own seedlings through our network of 22 colonial nurseries. Those that we cannot grow, we procure through competitive bidding in accordance with our procurement law. All program sites at Jayotag, meaning each sites, has pictures taken progressively with GPS reading, date and time when the pictures were taken. And anybody can see the Jayotag pictures in our website. We use, to monitor and validate our reparistation efforts, we use unmanned aerial vehicles. The reports submitted by our field personnel are all under oath and notarized by lawyers. We use good governance, transparency, accountability, checks and balance and the latest technologies to ensure that every money we put in is used for reparistation. We have done much in our reparistation but there is still much more to be done. The report of the IPCC, the recent report indicated that without the reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, impacts from warming could get out of control. These are serious implications for the Philippines. We are one of the most vulnerable countries in the world on the impact of climate change, as Taipun Haiyan painfully reminded us. This makes our participation in this summit important. There are many things that all of us can share but there are more things that we can learn from each other. We wish you a productive summit. Thank you very much.