 The Paris Agreement is the basis for international climate policy and climate action at the moment and the Paris Agreement also says that adaptation is a global challenge. So you would think that cross-border climate risks, which mean that what happens in one country affects countries in other parts of the world, is covered under that. But because the way in which climate policy is made by individual countries, adaptation has always been a country-driven process and they look at what happens within countries and the climate risks within countries and they are being considered, but not so much the cross-border climate risks. Now I think that there is an opportunity to change that. The global stocktake of the United Nations has shown that we need more ambition in adaptation and that includes taking into consideration these cross-border climate risks which have been overlooked so far.