 Okay, let's start on this session about space, space governance. It's part of the technology agenda at the World Policy Conference. We started, if you remember, 2016. It was around the geopolitical impact of data. Since then, the technology agenda has developed further in Atifri with the creation of a dedicated programme with Thomas Gommard, Annalise Pagnet. And then during this 15th edition, you saw yesterday technology around circular economy. You will hear about technology in energy, technology in healthcare tomorrow, and today's space. So when I discuss with Thierry about what would be a good topic, we very rapidly zoom in on space. You've seen, unfortunately, this year, the impact, the importance of space technology during the Ukraine conflict. It has been visible to all of us. Certainly not the application we would like to see, but at least it has made it visible. And in fact, space is going through a profound transformation. The one we've not seen since the inception of space, and it is driven by technology. As always, in technology, it's about cost. So the new technologies, be it electronic, be it materials, be it information technology, have allowed to reduce the weight, which is very important in space, and thus democratise the application of space. Now you speak of micro-satellites. They are about the size between the two of us, this thick, and you send 5,000 micro-satellites per year while we use to send 5 big, like this, satellites in the space per year. So it's a big transformation, big change. As such, it allows this reduction in cost, and the multiplicity of the capacity that is sent, not only in space, but then consequently on the operation on the ground, allow for the creation of new applications. One is clearly, as I mentioned before, the other one is exploitation of images, space images. You've seen how optic has improved, and that allows you to a level of granularity that opens new markets, new opportunities in space. It's just one example you will hear more. Now from a business standpoint, that's where I come from, if you look what space means today, and I refer, you can find the reference. It's a McKinsey report on space of August 2022, quite a good one, I recommend to read, stating that this is today 1 trillion, so a market. The expected annual growth rate is about 15% until 2030. Believe it or not, it still remains a respectable number. And there are 1,400 companies globally active in that market, with a lot of new entrants, thanks to the possibilities that I mentioned before. And these new entrants, what do they do? They continue to work on cost reduction. Again, that's what drives the adoption of technologies on an open new field. It allows the development of new business model. You will hear some examples on our panel today. And what we will see most probably is everything in infrastructure will go towards software defined, meaning you have a satellite, it's a piece of hardware, and you will equip it with the necessary capacity so that you can manage it from your software and then that allows you to extract more value and have more flexibilities and further reduce the cost of your operation. So that's the context. Now, there is obviously space started with the public sector, so there is obviously a geopolitical aspect to it. Every country is equipping themselves with space command, France recently as well, so everybody does it. And we see it and we will address it partially on this panel, but then you have civil operators coming in, creating a governance question that we will address on this panel. And to the point now that you have so much waste that you need to address waste in space, because we sent so many things, so that's a consequence. So it shows the evolution of that industry and the importance, the relevance for the World Policy Conference. So in order to address this theme today, I think we have a fantastic panel, and we will start by an introduction of Amir Algafri on my left, he is Senior Director of the Space Engineering Department at the Mohammed bin Rashid Space Center in Dubai. As the host, he will tell us the position of the UAE in space, the evolution, which is quite radical for the Emirati in it. Then we will address the governance question, starting with Professor Kazuto Suzuki, Professor of Science and Technology Policy at the Graduate School of Public Policy at the University of Tokyo, Japan, and Senior Fellow of Asia Pacific Initiative. Then his context setting will be complemented by Professor Daniel Andler, who is a Professor Emeritus at Sorbonne University and member of the Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques, who will complement the governance part with more, as we know, Daniel, the ethics perspective, because it's a technology space and when there is technology, you always have ethical questions. So that will be the context setting, the governance part, linked directly to the agenda of the World Policy Conference. Then we will move in a second section or third section in defence and cyber security. Obviously, defence, it will be our friend Mayor Shetrit, a former member of the Israeli Knesset, well-known in the World Policy Conference, who has had numerous ministry positions in Israel, and he will address the element of defence. Complimented by Patrick Trancleur, Founder and CEO of SISEC, which is a cyber security company active in confidential computing and in full disclosure in the World Policy Conference, Carista Venture Fund, linked to the CNES, a sponsor of the World Policy Conference, is an investor and a board member in SISEC, and personally as well. So I want this to be very clear in full disclosure, as it is a rule. Then we will move to the civil application. The civil application will be addressed by Geoffrey Boucault, CTO and Group Vice President, Corporate Strategy and External Relations at Valeo, a very large well-known French company working with Automobile OEM. And then François Barrault will conclude the panel, the intervention of the panel, and the application is the chairman of DG World, a leading European think tank in digital transformation, also a well-known friend of the World Policy Conference.