 Ladies and gentlemen, we are now invited to the podium for the remarks. Our special guest, Mr. Nina Modipo-Gel, Chief Secretary, Government of Nepal. I'm Chair of the National Association. I'd like to honour the Deputy Prime Minister. Distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen. I'm privileged of having this opportunity to share something with you. At the outset, I would like to take opportunity to thank all of you for your active participation and contribution to make this conference a success. Last six and a half days, we have created a platform for sharing practical and scientific aspects of implementing community-based education for climate change. As I heard that, the meeting remained highly interactive and you not only shared your views with the audience here, but shared views with the real-time business, with the outside community. I was briefed about the discussions where help and sharing of different methods took place for securing finance for local adaptation plans and programs, issues of institutional capacity building and managing the adaptation actions in the local governance structures we have discussed, issues of advice and means for financing your disease and reaching out to the most vulnerable community you have surfaced out during the deliberations. The deliberations also focused on how the private sectors and microfinances can be engaged and how the innovations are promoted for local options to mitigate. Accounting of natural capital and ecosystem services, securing benefit for financing, adaptation strategies too were enumerated during meetings. This is the summary of the meeting that transpired in the previous sessions and the filtrations which I was told. I believe that local communities, local community-based programs which promote traditional technologies and know-how can prove to be low cost options for adaptation interventions. The recommendations of the 3DF conferences can be documented in a proceedings which will showcase a bunch of adaptation financing alternatives. I am confident that the conference participants are taking back clear masses on and that recommendations of the conferences provided additional opportunities to collaborate amongst us who are involved in the climate policy dialogues. The one we give today is more vulnerable than the one we are inherited from our parents in terms of climate consequences. Even from the poorer region of the world we have a bunch of climate change catastrophes without their contribution to make this world more vulnerable. They don't have time to wait. People will need immediate action. As Dr. Salimullah just mentioned a small incident when they had the field trip, just he mentioned about the people dancing when there were traffic jams. In an adaptation film we cannot ask people to dance and play and enjoy when they are exposed with the risk of life unlikely. Not due to their actions and causes, but because of our actions and causes. Therefore our actions is warranted. Bloorings and recommendations of the conference will definitely help us forward to make a right decision on time. People in the villages have demonstrated us that implementing an adaptation and financing can be done in a cost-efficient manner with significant important results. Now it is our turn. We in the policy-making circle we have access to the international forums and funds. We are inclusion in making national and international adaptation policies and need to work together with due diligence. A great deal of unaccomplished tasks is IADOS. I believe that our joint commitment and collaborative efforts to act together can lead us to a slightly smart future. We have worked consistently about the need for the voices of developing worlds, the voices of local communities to be better at rest the financing need of adaptation. However the international climate funds mostly have been tender to flow on mitigation actions. As per my knowledge the percentage of the low total financing to mitigation elements crosses two-thirds of the total funding. I believe that this international conference and succeeding discussions that may follow would pave the way for stronger financing options to the local adaptation actions. A Barley-20 resource country taking a heavy burden by allocating resources to reduce emissions to promote a green economy and to better adaptation and also ensure stronger mitigation measures in case of meteorites. Those measures have taken unilaterally and voluntarily considering the common challenges the humanity faces due to climate change, what our capabilities are limited. In comparison the challenges and the risks we are exposed of. Please do not put further burdens to us in your casement and declarations. For the enhanced funding not as a charity at the mercy of the people who enjoy luxury but as a right of the people who suffered most. The recent accident in whom wise folks have taken a precious life of our beloved brave share parts. The consequence of such accident to the overall tourism, economy and life of your people in the remotest part of the world are great and healthy. The stakes are very high. Same accident in the developed world would have negligible impact to their economy. The rate of retreating ice in the Himalayas is alarmingly high exposing black rocks in the place of beautiful ice in educated world. The rate of evalances in that region is unimaginably with high frequencies. This all are because of the temperature rise which was the result of the luxury of periods people enjoying far away from the people suffered most. Those who have been enjoying luxury are risking the life of the people, the poorest of the poor at the other end of the world without realizing it. It is urgent need to make the people aware of the consequences of climate change and the risk and vulnerabilities to the people exposed to it. People in this part of the world need climate justice. It is their right to be compensated by the people who have made this world much riskier, not as a mercy or charity they have to offer by their own wishes. Temperature rise by 2 degrees and tropical region means temperature rise by at least 6% point in the Himalayan region. As a result, the snow in the Himalayan region as a source of freshwater for almost 2 billion people would disappear in a few decades. We cannot afford it. We need urgent action in a strong agreement with binding emissions cut to ensure not just about 1.5 degree temperature rise is warranted. We have to act resolutely, prudently and in a responsible manner to ensure safer and better world. I would like to call upon the world community and the major contributors of the pollution to the present world to present in a responsible manner for the safer and secure future of all of us. We in Nepal have made policies and provisions to ensure at least 80% of homes' growth funds reaches the needy people at the local level. So we need to review how much we have been successful DHE, bespaaga, but I believe that such policy initiatives on the part of receiving end would definitely empower the local community and make them step forward to get access over the funds and strengthen their capabilities to respond for the adaptation. On the other hand, the international communities need to move forward for a simplified process to access the funds by vulnerable countries and communities without hazards. The funds available at this time is barely sufficient to meet the challenges that it has. With this message, I would like to thank all the participants, organizers and sponsors, scientists and my colleagues, and especially Mrs. Cristina Feveres for your active participation in making this conference a success. Thank you very much for your active participation and strong commitment. I wish all of you a safe and pleasant journey back home. I hope we'll have more time to work together for our common cause and common future. Thank you.