 At work for more than a week now, Ministers have arrived, what do you guys want to see happening now with the wind time as well? Thursday the second to the last day is in a way more typical than the last day. You start at 7 in the morning, national meetings at 8 o'clock, G7-7 at 9 o'clock, consultations with your colleagues in other countries 10 to 12, meeting from 3 to 7 p.m., meeting again from 9.30 to 1.30 in all that process trying to arrive with an agreement. Sometimes you can eat if you're lucky, sometimes you don't eat and you just munch a chocolate bar or a biscuit when we go. We're trying to finalize the agreement on the LCA-RAD plus finance agreement which is about payments for the result space phase, so that is basically what we need to do this afternoon. The parties will have to negotiate how many? Three paragraphs, that's what they have to do, you know, over a hundred governments will be here. And your role? I'm the facilitator. What does that mean? Well, it means I'm the one that's responsible for trying to have the broker and agreement for this topic, which is the Red Plus finance. And which countries are moving ahead? Everyone's moving ahead, so the good thing about Red Plus is it's practically all the countries of the world, I mean, that have FARA, certainly. And the developed countries are actually interested in helping out, so it doesn't have the dynamics that other negotiations have, so, you know, hopefully we will be able to arrive with an agreement. You're not allowed. You can probably film from there. Last night we were negotiating up to midnight, so it was a tough negotiations, but I say we were able to clear up 50% to 60% of the tax, but we still have major disagreements, particularly on markets and how markets can be used for red, you know, to get resources and finances for Red Plus, so that's still up in the air. So today we'll spend the day negotiating that, I mean, this afternoon until midnight again to try to see if we can arrive with an agreement, but we're close. It will be difficult, it will be hard, but we're close to achieving an agreement. And how does it work between your role as facilitator of the Red Negotiations and then on the Filipino delegation? As a facilitator, you're not a Filipino, right? But you are yourself, so you do have your priorities and your agenda. The agenda is really subsumed under the agenda of your colleagues who drive this process. This is what's called a party-driven process. So the good facilitator helps the parties move forward fast, you know, but he cannot afford or the good facilitator should not take the wheels and run regardless of where the other parties want to go. Then you would have a contradiction, the other parties want to go here, other parties want to go to the right, to the left, backward. So you have to know that and manage that well. So we're all moving forward, even if sometimes it's lower than usual. The purpose of this is to give you a briefing on the state of the negotiations on red glass finance. I mean, and the only reason I'm doing this is because it's closing and I believe in the parties have actually given me sort of the mandate to leave different stakeholders. Essentially, last night, we were able to settle that regardless of whatever financing options that safeguards will be followed, there will be strong MRV, there will be an MRV system. The different requirements of red glass will have to be followed. That essentially has been settled. I have to say I'm very proud that I have pushed that envelope on transparency. I tweet about the negotiations. I Facebook about the negotiations. I do briefings with NGOs, with the business, the private sector, with indigenous peoples on red. Those are the key stakeholders. Whenever possible, I try to convince the parties to allow observers to listen. So it's a very secretive, confidential process, but I think it has potential of opening up and I feel very proud that I have opened up the process that I am responsible for, the red glass process. Don't misunderstand the issues are not many. There's really just a couple of big issues and there's already long-distance issues and it's just a couple of countries that are not accepting what might be the compromise. I'm tired, but I actually enjoy the work of negotiation as long as you're able to make a difference in trying to bring 195 countries, I think something like that now, nearly 200 countries together. There's nothing more satisfying than closing a deal that is a good deal. And I feel like in red plus, we will have that.