 Hello. I am happy to represent Canadians in the framework of this historic meeting. In Canada, there was a town called Lytton. I say was because on June 30th, it burned to the ground. The day before, the temperature had hit 49.6 degrees Celsius, the hottest ever recorded in our country. Canada is warming, on average, twice as quickly as the rest of the world. And in our north, it's three times quicker. The science is clear. We must do more and faster. So that's the pledge and the call I bring to this historic meeting. We've already laid the groundwork. In 2015, at the COP in Paris, I committed that Canada would put a price on pollution. We did that. And despite stiff political opposition, the Supreme Court upheld it, and Canadians supported it in our last two elections. We know pollution pricing is key to getting emissions down while getting innovation up and running. Our carbon price trajectory is one of the most globally ambitious ones, and it's rising to $170 a ton in 2030. This is a meaningful price on pollution designed not just to make life cleaner, but also make life more affordable and less expensive for Canadians. I call on other countries to do the same. Just as globally we've agreed to a minimum corporate tax, we must work together to ensure it is no longer free to pollute anywhere in the world. That means establishing a shared minimum standard for pricing pollution. Of course, what's even better than pricing emissions is ensuring that they don't happen in the first place, which brings me to my next major commitment. We'll cap oil and gas sector emissions today and ensure they decrease tomorrow at a pace and scale needed to reach net zero by 2050. That's no small task for a major oil and gas producing country. It's a big step that's absolutely necessary. To do our part globally, we've doubled our climate financing, including up to a billion dollars for the transition away from coal. And to help deal with the consequences of climate change, Canada's making our first contribution to the Adaptation Fund. We must find solutions that are suitable for our citizens in their daily lives. That's why Canada has set itself as a goal of selling only zero-emission vehicles and establishing a network of electricity distribution for net zero emissions by 2035. As said recently in Locke-Chermand, Paris has promised that Glasgow must deliver. The threat that represents climate change has no borders. That's why we have to make a common front to achieve concrete results. As we all collaborate to end the COVID-19 pandemic, we must apply this same urgency to act against the climate crisis and the loss of biodiversity. Over the next two weeks, we must demonstrate how we'll deliver on the promise of Paris with transparency and accountability to the world's most vulnerable who need us to act, to indigenous people who can show us the way, to young people marching in our streets, in cities around the world, we hear you. It's true. Your leaders need to do better. That's why we're here today. What happened in Lytton can and has and will happen anywhere. How many more signs do we need? This is our time to step up and step up together. Merci.