 My name is Nenaya Jantua. I am a director for public relations and external affairs at the Public Utilities Regulatory Commission, the PURC in Ghana. The PURC is a regulatory body set up by an act of parliament at 538 to regulate water electricity and natural gas transportation. It is an independent regulator, which is mandated by law to ensure that there is good provision of water, electricity and natural gas transportation for generation of electricity. But our concentration now is on water. The water sector in Ghana has two regulators. In the urban sector is the PURC and in the rural sector is the community water and sanitation agency. Even with the community water and sanitation agency, their role is more of facilitation than to regulate like we are doing. They provide facilitation for water into the communities, in the rural communities, where the communities and the municipalities take over the management of the water. The PURC's role is just urban water. But the challenge that we face in the water sector is that you find that because of migration and evolution, you find some of these rural communities migrating into urbanization, development, into the urban communities. So there are certain areas that used to be very rural have become urban, by development, by migration. And then the challenges, who provides for them? On the map, they are rural, but in actual sense, they become urban. So who provides for them? Now there's the challenge. So what we are now doing is that to bring collaboration and uniformity, we've all come together as sectors that our work depend on each other to do an MOU for stats, to collaborate, to talk, to share information, to share roles and duties, so that at the end of the day, the consumer would not be shortchanged. So after the MOU then, you look forward to maybe some form of legislative instrument that will be more binding for us to do what we have to do to ensure that some of these bossful next are dealt with.