 If you look at the goals together it's quite clear to see that there's a distinct overlap between each of the goals. For example if you take goal 2 which looks at addressing hunger, goal 6 which looks at access to safe water and goal 15 which is concerned with protecting terrestrial ecosystems and forests. Many tropical landscapes are going to be faced with these issues together and it's going to require a holistic approach to managing them. So certainly a landscape approach offers you that opportunity to address them holistically and if you don't there's a danger of focusing too much attention on one goal and that could be to the detriment of achieving the targets with another goal. For example if you can make great progress in boosting food production but this could be affecting your targets towards halting deforestation in that landscape. Primarily policy makers need to consider the impacts their policies will have across local, national and global scales. There's no point of creating policies to meet global targets if they're not cognisant of the effects the policies are likely to have at local, national scales. I'd say on top of that policy makers need to be aware of the impact of the policies they're making. So for example how a policy for one sector could impact the ability of another sector operating within the landscape. The signs are really encouraging. There's been a movement away from the Millennium Development Goals which really placed an onus on developing countries and meeting their targets. This document is definitely a whole lot more inclusive and there's been really strong commitments from both developed and developing nations. Yeah and in terms of the SDGs and landscape approaches there's been a big groundswell of support from everyone really asking for these calling for these more integrated and holistic approaches. The water sector, the agriculture sector, the energy sector they've all produced documents making calls asking for more integrated and holistic approaches but there's a lot of theory out there but we really haven't got anything concrete that has been put into practice as of yet. So there's a lot of potential for the landscape approach to meet these requirements from everybody but it's really time to put theory into practice and test to see if it's going to work.