 My name is Nabil Haq. I am a research fellow at Stockholm Environment Institute Asia Center. My research interest is broadly in climate finance, sustainable finance, climate technology, and aid effectiveness. So I have another role at SEI Asia, which is the platform manager for AID Atlas. AID Atlas is an online tool launched by SEI in 2019. And what it offers is transparency for researchers, journalists, civil society, to know where aid money is going. So it enhances the transparency in terms of which sector it is flowing to, as well as global objectives it is serving. So for the last 10 years, there's been considerable interest in climate finance, particularly the $100 billion promise that a developed world would give to the developing world. AID Atlas simplifies this by offering transparency of where this money has flown in the last 10 years. So it has become a niche for climate finance researchers to go to. There's now a publications page titled Research Based on AID Atlas. And if you go to all of the publications that have cited AID Atlas, you would see that climate finance is the theme that has received most citations. So it has found a niche among climate finance researchers. I annoy my family members by picking greasy spots of a pizza box, cutting it out to ensure that the pizza box gets recycled.