 My name is Roger Stern and I am here at this workshop because we've already started doing some work together with SeaCrafts. We work a little bit in our institute and the statistician, I should tell you, and we've been working on the baseline survey. We've been working on data management and now we're working on helping to integrate the Met services more closely into SeaCrafts activities. I think SeaCrafts is very well placed to add quite a lot of value. There are so many projects and initiatives on climate change. SeaCrafts is coordinating something that's very respected, which is the international agricultural research in many organisations. So it spans agriculture in its widest sense and of course SeaCrafts by its nature is trying to add the food security angle. So it's limiting in climate change because it's agricultural food security and I think that is good. It's adding to the projects in the region research at the highest level and it is able to go across country, share information across country. And my impression from what I've seen, it's doing two other things. I think the CG centres have generally been very exemplary in the way they share information resources. And secondly, the SeaCrafts team that has seen this opportunity has a number of people of the highest calibre and so having them working as a team provides a wonderful opportunity. Maybe the last thing I could add is it's relatively long term. So too many projects are short term, but SeaCrafts at least having a 10 year horizon provides such wonderful opportunities to support and enrich many other initiatives in the regions that they're working in. Their interventions I would see, they will do a few projects of their own, but I see them as enriching and helping projects quite a lot by supplying tools, supplying connectivity of different partners together that go often over countries and over regions, supplying other resources, leveraging funds because involvement with SeaCrafts can imply a very high standard of the research that's going to be coming. So I think they have very useful roles often as catalysts and rather than inventing many new projects trying to support, enrich and help existing projects be more effective in their work.