 So after the introduction, let's get started with the program. Last week, I had the opportunity to talk to Stefan Haidt-Force, who's a futurist, and he has a certain opinion around what might happen in the future. And I asked him this question around sustainability. As Albert's, we're very active as well in the electrification of cars and vehicles, and asked him the question around, Stefan, what do you think will happen around sustainability in the future? Sustainability, it's a big topic and you could always argue that, no, no, no, this is not the right path or at least there is a better path. Electric cars is a perfect example of this. Obviously a lot of big players out there, they have an interest in pointing elsewhere, or at least to slow things down. But instead of asking ourselves if a path is good or bad, let's think about what we really should talk about. Sustainability, sustainable, it means the opposite of unsustainable. And it's quite easy to agree that unsustainable, that sounds like a bad business strategy. So we're almost 8 billion people and the old business models can't grow anymore. That's where we are. So it's not going to be one solution, one path to fix it all. We will need all the paths we can think of. So electrification of cars, yes, that's one. That's better than fossil fuel cars. Less consumerism, sharing platforms, yes. That's also better, that's one. This isn't just going to be about the environment and pollution and climate change. You cannot think of sustainability as a cost anymore. Think of it as the Industrial Revolution. The coming decades, every business will do more with less. That's what it's about. Consumers love that. The reason people will buy electric cars from now on is primarily because it's going to be cheaper. But shareholders will also love it because more with less is good for everybody. Everybody who does this are part of the right path and the ones who don't get it are history. Thank you, Stefan. I think that's a very interesting answer and I particularly like your remark about more with less. Let's move on to the next question, which is all around connectivity. We've seen a big change over the last couple of years in people acting differently, connecting. How do you see that going forward into the future, Stefan? I believe we need to stop thinking about the online world as the opposite of a real world. When you think of young people like Generation Z and then Generation Alpha, the ones born in the 21st century, they never think of real experiences versus online experience. They never use words like digitalization. Whenever you hear people talk about something like digitalization, it's going to be old people. Digital is part of real experiences. You can think of it as the sixth sense. You have sight, sound, smell, taste and touch and now we have virtual. That is part of the real world. Thank you, Stefan. That was a very interesting answer and I liked your remark about the sixth sense. So with that, third question really is around how do you think social life will develop in the next couple of years? Do you see a fundamental change how the new generations will react and act together in this world? Well, to be honest, I don't know. I always try to remind people that the future is not to be predicted. It is to be created. But I will tell you this. After a year and a half of so much radical change, one thing we know will not change. Not even pandemics. We had many throughout history, as you know. Not even pandemics can change who we are. Human beings are social animals and isolation was always the worst form of punishment. And then one more thing. We also know that whenever something is extreme, the pendulum will eventually go the other way. So you know what came after the last pandemic? The roaring twenties. So that's my best bet for a new norm. The roaring twenties 2.0. But remember what I said. Don't listen to my words. Don't listen to predictions. You make it happen. Thanks, Stefan, and I will take on that challenge, but I cannot do that alone. I also would need the input from all of you in the audience. What do you think the future will bring?