 Delegates across Africa are set to accelerate the achievement of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals through impact investments in critical areas. Rising from a press briefing in Lagos, Executive Director of the One Foundation, flanked by their board and other partners, says the Africa Social Impact Summit will establish collaboration among the private and public sectors and the development community. This will discuss sustainable community development approaches, near-impact investment strategies and explore different opportunities for collaboration. The two-day summit will feature panel discussions, deer room ditches and impact workshops among others. We are actually also working on setting up a $20 million fund, catalytic capital, targeted at women in clean tech and circular economy. We are in the final stages and then we already have some seed capital to start it off and then we already had some interesting news coming to this meeting on some places where we have some other funds that we can add to make that happen. It is a position that there were so many incredibly committed organizations and individuals that were trying to do things in the social, in the impact space. Some of them were using charity, charitable organizations, others were using investment, others were, but they were not talking to each other. And so we had a lot of duplications, we had a lot of inefficiencies. There were a lot of others that were also matching blindly because someone has done the research but you don't have access to the research. So we say to ourselves what is the most powerful thing we can do and we felt if we could convene a summit that would bring people together, get them to listen to one another. But most importantly, once the conversation is done, get them to sit together, then we would have done our part. But for sure there are many people in Nigeria that are facing the severe consequences of the development crisis. When Nigeria last year floods the worst in 10 years, drought and heat are also intensifying strife, hurting livelihoods and constraining resources for Nigeria. So it seems clear to us as UN that unless we do take urgent action, the 2030 agenda will become no more than a broken promise to the world's most vulnerable people. And that's where our interest in this comes from, we truly believe this is an important piece in the road to recovery.