 Hello, my name is Jamie Williams. I'm senior policy advisor for poverty reduction for Islamic relief worldwide. I'm here at the CBA 14 conference. Obviously I'm not anywhere but in my home office, but I'm enjoying the event here. And I'd just like to mention the project that we've been working on in Indonesia. In Indonesia, it's called supporting poor communities to claim their rights in climate. And we're doing it in conjunction with the consortium for participatory study and development concepts in Lombok Island, which is a West Nusa Tangara province of Indonesia. This is a place where the land is quite fertile, the lowlands are quite fertile, but the coastlands are, the livelihoods are quite difficult. People live on rain fed farming. There are lobster farmers and salt collectors and the climate is changing there and they're suffering a great deal from lowering yields that are really threatening their livelihoods. We found this out because we did a very deep and thorough situation analysis and very deep community participation. And amongst the findings about the situation we found that some of the rain fed farmers were actually positively deviant. And they were seemed to be able to adapt to the changing conditions better than others. What we found was that they were more able to access the weather related information that was being made available from the national and regional bodies. This is because their education levels tended to be a bit higher. Those farmers that were able to, I'm talking about weather forecasts, primarily, but also meteorological projections and also geophysical projections because it's an area with a great deal of earthquakes, these farmers were able to maintain their livelihoods and to adapt to the changes that were coming. So what we found was that the weather related information was not easy to understand for many of the farmers and also the sections of the lobster farmers and for the salt collectors. And so the project was essentially around making the information useful to the communities and to the users. So we were something called a community based climate school which produce curriculum and modules and also help to make locally relevant crime climate projections. So we were sort of equipping capacity building the capacity of the communities of these very poor farmers to maintain their livelihoods by being able to predict understand what the weather was going to be and be able to predict what was going to happen. In the process, the communities were able to inform the climatology and meteorology and geophysical agencies about what data was most relevant, and also to provide inputs to them, and the agencies are able to tailor the information to make it relevant and accessible to the communities needs. So the farmers and fishermen and salt producers yields have increased. The farmers particularly have taken advantage of how to estimate crop yields and crop losses and mitigate the risks including risk to production and the market risks. So the sources have taken on new technologies something called salt prism houses, which will allow them to make year round production sort of regardless of the weather. Well to some extent lobster farmers have found alternative feed sources rather than relying on wild sources which was sporadic due to weather events and climate differences. Some people involved have been had their livelihoods made more secure as a result of the of the project. In order to maintain this a climate working group has been set up by the project to link with the provincial development body to climatology and meteorology and geophysics agencies. And the Ministry of Forestry Ministry had other NGOs working in the island and beyond. So we hope that this would just be a pilot and it will be able to be taken on later. Well thank you for listening sorry it's been so intensive and so fast, but if you need any more information just contact me at Islamic release. Thank you.