 Friends and colleagues, ladies and gentlemen, I'd like to start by thanking the International Organization for Migration for inviting me to be part of the high-level panel of Human Ability and Climate Advocates. I would also like to thank the IOM for integrating environmental and climate issues into all areas of work, policy, research, international migration law, advocacy, communication, capacity, and your own operations. It is exceedingly important that every organization working towards multilateral solutions to international issues take a holistic and integrated approach because, as we all know, climate change is an issue that cuts across borders and economic and industrial, and truly touches everyone. Climate change multiplies and amplifies on every face and it left unchecked because it will increase its instability and contribute to involuntary migration and chaotic displacement. We know this because, right now, we have more clarity on the issue of climate change than ever before. The IPCC Fifth Assessment Report details the vulnerability of those without resource to migrate away from climate change impacts and the vulnerability of migrants. The IPCC Fifth Assessment Report also shows with clarity that we can avoid high fuel costs of climate disruption through immediate transformation to low carbon and a large amount of climate neutrality in the second half of the century. And right now, we're seeing momentum build towards this transformation. People are marching in the states in support of action. Business and investors are turning to renewables for lower cost and capital-steady returns. Local and national policy is increasing the local and national toward climate change growth. In the UNFCCC process, governments are working on a new universal climate change agreement with great potential to bend emissions curve this decade and put us on a course to a long-term climate neutral work. In this moment, as we approach the UN climate change conference in Lima in December, where a draft agreement will emerge and towards Paris in 2015, where that agreement will be adopted, governments need resources and resources to take ever-boulder action. Ladies and gentlemen, I ask you to give governments those reasons and those resources. Governments are waking up to the fact that climate change is a threat to a chronic and post-security change of health and COVID and what? When the draft agreement is discussed by ministers across companies, they must understand that there are also migrations in the act. Disentantly, the climate signal from the rising tide of natural disasters can sometimes be tough, but the analysis is improving. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs and the Internal Displacement Monitoring Center has looked at data for 2,000 years. It suggests that at least 36 million people were displaced by a sudden onset of natural disaster with more than 20 million displaced due to the sudden onset of weather-related disasters about 6.5 million people because of floods. Research from other sources suggests that many millions of people are also displaced annually as a result of slow onset of climate-related disasters such as traffic. The military is also concerned. This year, the U.S. Department of Defense has released a new report on climate change looking at future security services. The loss of glaciers will strain water supplies in several areas of our hemisphere, said Secretary-General Chakhegel at a conference in Peru alongside the publication of the report. The further stated, destructions and devastation can sow the seeds for instability. Trouts and crop failures can leave millions of people without any life-form and trigger waves of mass migration. The IOM understands the meaningful resources that create actionable policy choices and has taken sizable strides towards creating these resources. I ask you to continue what is in value of it. I'm willing to ensure that migration is considered in a varied and growing suite of resources that enable action. Resources are there. We're coming online, but governments must be connected with them to reap the benefits of a global transition to climate change. Through this conference and your own influence, you can help make that connection and increase political will for ambitious mitigation and policy and a commitment to adaptation in your role. Doing so minimizes the need to manage migration and maximizes our ability to stabilize the climate and promote low-carbon social and economic growth. Right now, we have the opportunity to preserve our national and autonomous levels, keep populations secured in their communities, and minimize climate-related migration for generations to come. We must serve this opportunity now, and we must do it together. Thank you, and I look forward to seeing the outcasts, with interest and to be able to take your knowledge on the results of this meeting. Okay. Well, let me then move...