 We've heard during the previous very interesting session how innovation has been driving in the semiconductor industry. We'll try to focus in this one on how innovation can also help on climate. So following the COP 27 Paris Agreement, countries now representing about 90% of world GDP have pledged to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050. Carbon is also very high on all corporate boards agenda, following pressure from investors, but also customers, and increasingly stringent regulation. More and more corporates are publicly stating their targets to net zero and are actively working on their decarbonization plans, which by the way, very often translates into investments to modernize their industrial estates. But actively reducing the CO2 emission will not suffice. A gap estimated to 10 gigatons of CO2 per year is estimated that will have to be removed from the atmosphere, moving forward via nature-based solutions like reforestation or via technology-based solutions, namely carbon capture and sequestration solutions. As a result, energy transition and decarbonization require massive investments. And as outlined and stressed by IMF recently, there is so much that public budget can fund on this front. So many countries like Canada, Sweden, or Singapore have been imposing attacks on carbon emissions. And to foster proper behaviors, systems like emission trading schemes are implemented in regions like Europe, whereby corporates are allocated based on their carbon intensity, a given number of free quotas per year, and overperformance can trade them on an exchange. The voluntary carbon market comes on top of these mandatory schemes or compliance markets. Issued on the back of carbon avoidance or removal projects, the carbon credits are purchased by corporates eager to accelerate their path to net zero. So they are a way to channel and fund projects and project developers that otherwise would be very hardly bankable under traditional project financing criteria. So some refer to carbon credits as to the currency of decarbonization or the net of net zero. A few weeks ahead of COP28, this session is aimed at providing a little color around the voluntary carbon market value chain. And it is my pleasure to host today panelists representing innovative startup solutions, starting with Mariam Almansoori, general manager of Rebound. Sam Atwood, founder and CEO of Air Capture. Christine Inge-Larrison, head of CapFix business development and commercialization. On Visio, we have Sam Gill, co-founder and CEO of Silvera. And we will start now with a video interview of Annette Nazaret, who is the chair of the board of the Integrity Council for the Voluntary Carbon Markets, actively working on the foundations, foundational principles of this market, which by nature is totally bottom up and today unregulated.