 Mae yna ddefnyddio i gael. Rwy'n gobeithio i'r oeddu i ddim yn gweithio i gael y bydd yma. Yn ymgylch, yng Nghymru, mae'n ddweud i gael y Llyfrgellu Fygrifol Fygrifol, mewn cyfael y Llyfrgellus Fygrifol, yn y rhan. Rwy'n gweithio i gael, mae'n gwirionedd y Prif Weinidog, mae'n gwirionedd y Cyfryd, mae'n gwirionedd ymgylch. Mae'n gweithio i'r cyfryd, mae'n gwirionedd y nifer. I'm sure many, all of us here today will agree that the sooner the world cuts its greenhouse gas emissions, the smaller the rapidly increasing resource requirements for adaptation will be. As we've already heard, the IPCC's fifth assessment has told us that greenhouse gas emissions are growing faster than ever and the world's carbon budget will soon be exhausted. According to the IPCC, if we keep emitting greenhouse gases at the present rate, the world is on track, unfortunately for an average warming between 3.7 and 4.8 degrees by the end of this century. And we need to bear might be starving statistics and uncertainties as we look out there here. And although the focus on developing countries is rightly on adaptation, many will agree that there is an opportunity for all countries to contribute to the collective effort to reduce emissions by creating and enabling by investments in low emissions and carbon resilience investments in sectors such as agriculture, energy transport and construction. And it's true that the IPCC's recent report does provide some good news. There is growing evidence that says that taking action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions can reduce, provide the development and climate benefits co-benefits are enlarged through the recent IPCC reports. But we actually know a great deal. We know enough now to act and to act effectively to reduce society's climate-related risks. And the power of CBA that we gathered at the eighth time to celebrate, in many respects, is that it harnesses the local capacity and resources bills on indigenous knowledge and recognises the potential of autonomous adaptation. And there's plenty of action that you've seen here in the parliament and that you yourself are part of. Some of the experience we've seen in Cairn's partners from, for example, the city of Cartagena in Colombia, which has created and adapted neighborhoods with communities and municipalities in business in the face of the Greek flood. How communities in Ethiopia, Uganda and Mozambique are reprogramming their district development budgets to more climate-resilient activities to benefit local libraries. How climate-resilient housing in Da Nang in Vietnam is saving lives and poverty in the face of typhoons. And here, with the government and the power of the CBA Cairn, it's very pleased to be launching reports on the economic impact assessment of climate change across key sectors, where the cost of a sector of adaptation has been explicitly pulled together. These are great examples and you will know many more. But I think we know, as the previous CBA conference has said, that it is still a very large-scale challenge and we know that finance, the focus of this conference, is critical to this. Of course, the international climate finance is expected to deliver a huge range of things and work at a range of scales and it will need to be challenged to drive transformation change at these various levels. And this has already happened with the GEF and the Adaptation Fund and a national law through the National Climate Change Fund, such as for now, in Rwenda. But as the CBA's annual climate finance landscape report tells us, despite increased commitments by Dems to adaptation, in 2012, according to CPI, 94% of $360 billion spent on climate finance was focused on mitigation. CBA data also tells us that most climate finance originates in the same country in which it was spent, so some 75% of finance that's raised with climate finance is delivering in that same country. And I believe that by demonstrating a national commitment and a trend in increasing of such resources, that developing countries are in a strong position to make the case of increased support for international climate finance to various institutions. And here in Nepal, we've seen our hosts have taken real action to do this at local areas and heard about the matters, and they're leading role in the LDC group with the demonstrations of commitment that the government in Nepal has made. So in conclusion, ladies and gentlemen, I would say that international climate finance needs to enable adequate resources for developing countries to pursue their transition to low carbon and climate resilience economies. These resources, of course, will need to be considered as catalytic and used in a way that shifts larger sums of investment from public sector and private sector to drive the broader transformation to climate resilient societies. This does mean that at all levels, from national, international or local level, long term planning for strong institutional capacity will be necessary to effectively access and deliver climate finance. I think many of you are part of that, and the CKM stand very much ready to continue to partner with you and others in making this happen. Ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much.