 At the Business Forum we presented the case of Nairobi City Water, a well-attended forum so this was very nice and exciting for us and at this forum we were able to showcase the good work that we are doing but we're also able to share with the people who participated the challenges that we have as a water utility. The innovations that we've done at Nairobi Water is something that the whole world can embrace and benefit from. We've had a lot of challenges in the informal sector as indeed many countries have semi-formal or what we call informal sector is underprivileged areas where the people live but they still get water and they still have the meters. Access to these is very hard. So when our mobile field agents go out there and people haven't paid their bills they complain why why they never paid their bills. We tell them Jisome Mita. So this is Jisome Mita is one of our innovations which is called Read Your Own Mita. It's a supermarket principle where you go to the supermarket you pick what you want bring it to the teller and I'll charge you and of course you trust that the people will pick what they want and give it to you to charge them and not pocket it. So when they call the company and say hey listen we we you disconnected my water and and I didn't get a bill we tell them Jisome Mita read your own meter send it to us we'll give you the bill pay to us by impasse you don't even have to come here and when we come when we come to verify the correctness of the transaction you still have your water. So a lot of people are now honestly reading their own meters sending us the meter reading and we're giving them the bill and their pain and it's all it's all it's all very modern. So that's the one element of what we can share in terms of our innovations but on the other side as a utility we don't we have a shortage of water and generally we have a 700,000 cubic meters or water requirement in the in the county of Nairobi in Kenya but we only have 500,000 cubic meters of water when we're pumping from the from the reservoirs at 110 percent so we have a shortage of 200 cubic meters of water 200,000 cubic meters of water a day so what I'm hoping to gain from from being here in Brisbane from all the water experts is his answers that they can give us that we can be able to to satisfy that shortfall and there's so many innovations that they have you know that we've discovered you know we've attended all the all the all the sessions that have to do with rainwater harvesting with groundwater obstruction and and various other solutions that we are finding non-revenue water our non-revenue water stands at 40 percent and 15 percent of this is due to leakages dilapidated reticulation system so you know we we're finding all these innovations in this exhibition on how we can sort that how we can detect leakages if we sort out that 15 percent you know that's 200,000 right there and if we are able to reduce the non-revenue water even more then we fulfill that shortfall so the conference has been helpful to us as a utility not as a water service provider in finding out how we can find bridge that gap of a shortage of water