 Singapore has a wide range of police capabilities that it can provide to support our member countries to enforce forest crime, to enforce the laws in the forestry sector and also to ensure that there is transparent financial flows in the way that the forest sector is managed and international investment is made into the forest sector. We can do this through linking up countries globally between our national police forces. We can ensure that intelligence is exchanged so that any illegal activity is closely monitored and prevented, that as countries involved in both producing timber, importing timber, are able to communicate with each other to ensure the legality of that timber and to prevent any illegal activity along that entire timber supply chain, that as foreign investment is made in countries to support their timber industry, that there is a proper transfer of intelligence and information between those responsible for financial investigations, responsible for monitoring the flows of that money. We can bring those to those countries together, those investigators together to to oversee and monitor that work. We can provide analytical support through our analysis teams that are able to access the Interpol database to identify any potential weak points or hotspots that we need to ensure that there is a greater oversight and greater monitoring of by law enforcement. We're able to sort of do that across all of our member countries. We've been working very closely with a number of different regions, particularly across Central and West Africa and also across Latin America. We've been able to bring a number of different countries together for joint law enforcement operations. We facilitate their information exchange. We help bring them together into the same room so that they can exchange intelligence and work with each other to ensure proper transboundary investigations in a coordinated manner so that they're able to complement each other's investigations. Over the past couple of years we've managed to support a number of different law enforcement operations resulting in significant protection of forested areas across the globe. We estimate that our work in forest protection through strengthening law enforcement has resulted in at least 330,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent being saved from admission into the atmosphere. By forest protection we can point directly to our ability to help protect forests and thereby reduce overall greenhouse gas emissions.