 So, Norway's International Climate and Forest Initiative, NICFI, worked to reduce tropical deforestation across a broad range of areas. We have three main goals to keep global warming below 1.5 degrees to protect biodiversity and to promote sustainable development. And a key element for all of these goals is to stop tropical deforestation. And we work in a number of specific areas such as the financing sector to invest green, such as promoting deforestation-free supply chains, combating forest crimes, protecting the rights of indigenous peoples in forests. And across all of this is transparency. We work in particular with forest country governments that need to have good forest monitoring systems to be able to implement policies and move in the right direction. And in our dialogue with the forest countries about their forest monitoring, we understood that access to high-resolution satellite imagery was a bottleneck. With the high-resolution imagery, they can improve their monitoring, they can act more rapidly when deforestation is developing, and they can be better placed to really have stronger policies and strategies in place, as well as accessing international finance. So, we decided to do a public procurement and basically buy free access for everyone to high-resolution images on tropical forests. The programme, we think, has been very successful, even though it's only been two and a half years. It has more than 18,000 registered users, but probably many, many more. It's been used by forest governments, by NGOs and civil society, by indigenous peoples, by media in investigative journalism, by the finance sector and commodities companies. And we see and hear the reports and stories on how these different actors made them able to take more effective actions to stop deforestation. Our contract finishes in September 2024. We would like to initiate a dialogue with others that might be interested in partnering to be able to keep this going as a public global good. So, the high-resolution satellite data programme has really helped a lot of forest country governments improve their forest monitoring. And when they have better forest monitoring, they can then implement better, more effective, targeted policies to reduce deforestation, which is important for climate change.