 The IAA is participating in the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Bonn, Germany, where world leaders will reaffirm their commitment to implement the Paris Agreement on climate change. It's important for us to be there, to really interact with the delegates, to help them better understand what the role of nuclear science and technology is and how it can support this whole problem of climate change. Nuclear power plays an important role in climate change mitigation and sustainable development. Without nuclear power, it will be very difficult to achieve the Paris Agreement goal of keeping the rising global temperature this century well below the 2 degrees Celsius target. The US government recently announced a donation of $433,000 to support research by the IAA's Ocean Acidification International Coordination Center in Monaco. We use nuclear science to understand how ocean biology is changing. For example, there's a particular isotope of calcium, calcium 45, that we can measure using sensitive nuclear equipment. And by measuring that, we can see how different marine species are absorbing calcium under different climate scenarios. Ocean acidification has emerged as a major threat to marine organisms and ecosystems. So ocean acidification is one of the consequences of our carbon dioxide emission and we know as a fact that it's altering the chemistry of the ocean in a very significant manner. If you would like to know more about the IAA, please visit our website. Thank you for watching and I hope to see you next time.