 Bonjour, je suis Diane Daras, je suis d'une professionnelle de l'eau et je vais prendre la présidence de l'Association internationale de l'eau. Diane Daras est un ingénieur et un ingénieur civil qui signifie que j'aime les choses concrètes. J'aime construire, j'aime la construction résiliente. IWA est un très fort réseau, c'est une organisation très puissante, où il y a beaucoup de connaissances, des gens qui travaillent ensemble et qui travaillent ensemble depuis longtemps. C'est une réseau résiliente. Il y a maintenant un moment très intéressant, un moment politique. En 2015, il y avait deux grands événements. First, the United Nations have launched the SDGs, sustainable development goals, fixing goals, targets. And I think it has been a very important momentum for remembering that we need to deliver water and we need to give basic sanitation and sanitation. And that's for everybody. The second big event, which is very important for us, is the climate change event in Paris, COP 21, because people have really been able to set means in order to limit the climate change to two degrees. But it was also the first time where we were speaking about water, remembering that climate change is water change and that we need to mobilize in order to find solutions. So we as IWA, we need also to remember that, to push the awareness on water at the right level for SDGs and also because we need to create resilient cities, climate change with resilient cities. So it's very important, 2015 is a very important year. And it was a 15 years of the association, because the association was the merge of scientific and operational people, which merge in 2000. So for the 15 years, for the maturity of the association, we have fortunately that political momentum. IWA has absolutely a responsibility to help and to push its members to offer the solutions. It's true that it is still unacceptable that you have 10% of the world population without good water and twice as much with no basic sanitation. And I should remember that every minute you have three kids, three children dying from diarrhea. That means 10 jumbo jets each day. That is a scandal. We need to move, we need to give, of course it's a collective mission. And thanks as I said to the SDGs, we have now the political means and the willing to do something. So political willing and professional solution, I think really we can move and do something. The vision of IWA is of course keep developing tools, keep developing innovation around water treatment plants, around wastewater treatment plants. And the vision is that we can reduce our consumption. We of course can reuse it because the water you use can be reused to another application. Not for drinking purpose, but sometimes for agriculture or for industry. And of course we have to resplenish it. We have to give it back and be able to give back to the nature. And that it is up to now we were also looking at the river, but the river at the hand go to the sea. So again if we work well at the level of the network, we protect the river. And then the river, if it is well protected and well managed, you protect the ocean. Because we have to take care also of the ocean. So I think we have and we still have to progress a lot. We have been progressing a lot on sanitary aspect. The drinking water is good quality. But there is still a lot to do to protect the environment. I think we are far far from being at the end of that journey. Drinking water is good. We are able to do perfect water. But we need to progress a lot on the environmental side. When we give back water, what we do. And there are still a lot to do there.