 Thank you for the presentations. It's very impressive what's happening and very ambitious. I had a question for the two mares. How do you think you will spend the money that you're receiving from these payments? What types will they be going to individual farmers, more projects, or are these things that you are still determining? So we'll have a bit of translation. That's what's going on if you can't hear it. Okay. This is our government budget. First of all, according to the law, it will be passed through the People's Representative Assembly. This is a process. Secondly, the government budget for ecological civilization is relatively specific. On the one hand, it's about ecological protection. Its budget may be for some groups and some production units. On the other hand, it will be for the people, for the people. For example, we have set up a protective mechanism for ecological construction. It is based on the forest and forest areas of the farmers. It is based on the budget of each unit. In addition, the development of ecological industries for the people is a policy-based service. So in China, the government budget has to be approved by the People's Congress. So there is a very strict procedure to this. And for the ecological civilization, we have specific budgets as well. But broadly speaking, they can be developed into two categories. The first category involves the funding for compensation to specific entities. The second aspect of the budget deals with the people's livelihoods. For example, for the farmers who have ownership of a certain acreage of ecological forests, the compensation from the government's budget will be decided on the acreage of those forests. I am from Fuzhou, Jiangxi Province. Fuzhou is a very sensitive city with a very deep cultural foundation. It has a population of only 4 million. Fuzhou has a population of about 5.2 million. The budget of Fuzhou is mainly used for its own purposes. The third category involves the restoration of ecological forests. For example, the third category involves the destruction of crops and crops. The government has already set up a restoration process for the ecological forest. The second category involves the restoration of ecological forests. Fuzhou has a population of 4 million. Fuzhou has a population of 1,945 million. Since the beginning of last year, Fuzhou has been a big city with a population of 30 million. The third category involves the restoration of ecological forests. For example, the restoration of the water resources, and the restoration of the ecological forests. The government has set up a restoration process for the national forests. At the same time, the government has set up a restoration process for the forests. I will return to the topic. I am from Fuzhou, Jiangxi Province. In terms of the budget for ecological civilization, it can be divided into three aspects. For Fuzhou City, it is a fairly modest city. It has only a population of 520,000 people. In terms of government spending in support of ecological rehabilitation and conservation, the first category of our ecological spending relates to ecological rehabilitation. For example, for some mining projects, we have specific designated budgets for restoring the natural environment after the discontinuation of the mining activities. The second category deals with conservation. For example, in our jurisdiction, we have implemented a natural forest conservation program, and we have a ban on logging for most of our natural forests. We have a certain budget in support of this effort. The third category of our government spending related to environmental protection or ecological protection deals with the people's livelihood. For our local residents and also for the ecological forests, for those people who have ownership or tenure over those natural resources, they will be compensated in addition to the compensation, monetary compensation from the state budget, national government budget. We also have local government budget in support of this effort. And also, we take care of poverty alleviation as well. We try to take measures to absorb certain labor from the poverty-stricken areas. So this is also one of the ways for us to improve the livelihoods of the local communities. Thank you so much for the good question and those very insightful answers. I want to invite two more questions, ideally for Miss Jiang from Shenzhen and for Ouyang. And while you might be coming to or raising your hand for a microphone, I just want to say we have videos that have come from both Fuzhou and Lishui cities. So they will be shown during some of the breaks, and you'll be able to get a better sense of what is going on today in those places that are being developed really as pilots for testing out all the financial mechanisms and policies that we think of and share together as possibly working to achieve the vision. And I also want to say tomorrow night, we've heard from Mary and Anne and Henry, there's this wonderful evening planned in the Bing Concert Hall. Please come at 7.15, the doors will open. In the main concert hall we'll have a performance both from Fuzhou and from Lishui city with different performers kind of bringing to us another form of expressing what we're all reaching for in this transformation to an ecological civilization. So that's tomorrow evening. But let's have a couple of questions. Thank you. This is a question for the first speaker. I think the work that's going on in China sounds fantastic. My question is the other big influence of China is the development around the world in other countries. And I'm wondering whether there are any plans to work with the companies that are going out and bring them up to the same level with the things that you're doing in China? Oh, yeah. That's a really good question. Actually, when we are kind of like in printing, I give the presentation, that's the same question. Actually, recently you'll know China will have one bank, one road, road program, some strategy, something like that. Actually, our center works with Sri Lanka and, how to say, Cambodia. And also work with the other Asian countries together to do the same thing. They launch a new project from China Commissar to identify the crucial area for water, for biodiversity and to say, where we can use for development, where we must protect together. So let's go. Basically, I hope we can do something. There's also, if you look in Nature magazine maybe three or four weeks ago, a write-up on the digital Silk Road, which is a new initiative through the Chinese Academy of Sciences to develop the kind of data we have on the natural capital platform across the Belt and Road Initiative countries, so about 66 countries, an open data platform on natural capital that kind of in the dream will track change in real time. So there is that, plus many other efforts you can ask Ouyang about, that extend across China's footprint. And maybe one final question. Here's a hand up. Oh, I see. Thank you. Please stand in the back. And then we'll have more over the break. Thank you. Good afternoon. Good morning. Yeah, my name is Lukman Issa. I'm a graduate research student at Brandeburg University of Technology in Germany. Originally, I'm from Nigeria. I'm from a coastal city called Lagos in Nigeria. I got quite fascinated with what is happening. Genssen municipality. And I'm trying to make a correlation with my own city in Lagos. We've got problem of rapid urbanization presently. And I want to know more about the ecological control line. How we've been able to achieve 50% of the land and save it for natural conservation purposes against the development. In our case, that's what the policy makers are trying to struggle with and would not be able to get the right balance. With this, I hope I can learn from you. Thank you very much. Would you get a photo of your friend, Chef? No, I don't have one. I don't have one. You see, you made a comment. He is from Nigeria. He is from Nigeria. He is only 20 years old. He wants to learn from you. He wants to learn from you. Thank you very much. Thank you for your concern to our city. Let me introduce our work. I would like to speak in my native language. Please translate. I've just introduced it. Because Shenzhen is a coastal city. So our main job now is to combine marine protection and land protection. What we're doing now is to protect the most important part of marine protection and land protection. That is, the ecological red line we just talked about and put it together to make a unified consideration. This is a job to protect the space. I've just introduced it. What we want to do now is a very important thing. How to use our scientific methods and calculations to evaluate the city from a small village to a big city now. What is the ecological change in the process? Has it changed or has it gone bad? If it hasn't caused a big damage or impact, what have we done wrong? If some aspects have started to change, what should we pay attention to? So I think this evaluation work is very important. During this evaluation process, we need to build a network to do this. In addition, we also need a more objective, more reasonable and scientific evaluation of some indicators and methods and tools. So this is also a very important idea that we and Mr. Dilley and Mr. Ouyang have worked together. In these aspects, I hope that Mr. Dilley and Mr. Ouyang can provide some inspiration and help. Thank you. Just now, I give everybody a very brief introduction to the city of Shenzhen. Now, as a matter of fact, our current focus is to integrate marine conservation with the terrestrial conservation. This has everything to do with the red-line policy. I just described very briefly a couple of minutes ago. And this holistic and integrated approach to conservation by combining marine conservation and terrestrial conservation through spatial analysis is something we are currently focused on. And another aspect of work is our science-based approach to inform all our work and efforts. For example, over the last couple of decades, Shenzhen has evolved from a small fishing village to a well-known metropolis internationally. And in this process, naturally, great ecological changes have occurred and we need to take a look at those changes. What are the improvements and what are the degradations? And if there are damages, ecological damages and degradations, what are the lessons we need to draw from those banned examples? In terms of good examples and improvements, what kind of experience we can distill from those good cases? And another aspect of our work is to establish comprehensive and inconclusive monitoring system. And of course, this will require scientific-based approaches as well. We need to understand better what metrics will work and what measures need to be applied to those monitoring projects and work and what kind of tools will be at our disposal. And then this is what motivated us to partner with Professor Ouyang's team and Professor Daley's team.