 How crucial is the European Green Deal right now? It is, in my view, the best we have in the world of a transformation agenda that really looks at transformation in depth, in scope, in holism, and in time dimension. It's really well done. As I like to say, it's totally bureaucratic, but in the Weberian rational bureaucratic mold. In other words, it's really thinking through systematic processes to make change in the best of the bureaucratic sense. Who has responsibility? Who needs to do what? What are the timelines? What are the processes? But it's not a plan. It's a process right now. The European Green Deal is not a plan. I want us to help fill in the plans at the country level, at the regional level. What really to do, because what the European Green Deal is, is a set of timelines, milestones, in an absolutely desirable, holistic approach, but it doesn't have underneath it the what to do in detail. And Europe still too much then leaves the what to do at the country level, rather than really regional investment strategies. Though that's getting better. It's still not enough, in my view. We need a regional energy system. We need regional food, production, distribution, use, management system. We definitely need regional systems for the ecology of the region, for the health of the Mediterranean Sea, and so forth. So I think the European Green Deal is a huge plus, and it is already having its global diplomatic effect. Definitely Europe brought the East Asian countries into the recent announcements of China net climate neutrality by 2060. Japan under new Prime Minister Suga announcing very quickly upon his new Prime Minister ship climate neutrality by 2050. Korea the same. So we really have a lot of partners. And once we pry Trump's finger from his Oval Office desk and carry that man out of his office, we're going to have a good president in the United States. And there will be a US Green Deal in effect to join this. So I think we're going to have a lot of opportunity diplomatically for the European Green Deal to be applied first in the European countries, the 27. I hope we can find ways to extend this to North Africa and the Eastern Mediterranean because it's a framework, not only a European policy, but a very well-designed framework and then as part of global diplomacy. And I'll just end at that point to say that 2021 is potentially shaping up as a breakthrough year. I don't think that's just a cliche. I think it's actually real. This has been a very, very tough year with COVID, with Trump, with just an extraordinarily difficult year. 2021 should be much better. Our governments by then, first, should figure out how to contain this pandemic. They've not quite done so. Unfortunately, that's why the second wave is so terrible. But the knowledge of what to do is much better. There will be vaccines coming, which will help, probably in mass use by the second half of 2021 and partial use before then. That will help. There will be President Biden. That will help a lot because the madness from the United States was the greatest distraction to global policymaking in the world in recent years. It just stopped logical thinking in the G20 and in so many other processes. That will improve dramatically. And, colleagues, we have at least three major global events next year that we should be present at in a very active way. The first is COP 15 of the Convention on Biological Diversity in Kunming, China in May, which should set ground rules for biodiversity conservation four years ahead. The second is the World Food Systems Summit, called by the UN Secretary General in the fall. Very important opportunity for us. And if the SDSN Europe and SDSN Mediterranean works closely with FAO, WFP, the Rome-based institutions, I think we can end all of the initiatives that we have with Barilla and the food industry and Regeneration 2030 with Andrea Illy. We really can contribute to the World Food Summit in an important way. And then, of course, we have COP 26 in Glasgow in November, which needs to be the time in which every country has committed to decarbonization by mid-century so that there finally is the global understanding and orientation of how to get to net zero in a timely way. This is all going to be on the agenda. I think we have a big leadership role to play because of your leadership and because of Europe's unique leadership role in the global agenda. And this, I find very promising. So let me conclude where I started with great thanks for a wonderful report and a wonderful initiative. Thanks to Angelo for your leadership on all of this. It's a tremendous contribution and a very exciting one. Thank you.