 Honorable Prime Minister of India, Sri Narendra Modi Ji, Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Shri Bhupinda Yadav, President of the World Bank, Mr. David Malvas, Co-Chairman of Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Mr. Bill Gates, Executive Director of the U.S. Enormment Program, Ms. Inga Anderson, Administrator of the UNWB Program, Mr. Akin Stena, Author of the Nobel Prize-winning nice theory, Prof. Cass Sunstein, International Climate Economist, Lord Nicholas Stern, President of World Resources Institute, Mr. Amy Dasgupta, and all the citizens and the youth who are joining us from across the world for this webcast live on the occasion of the World Environment Day. It is our pleasure to welcome you on this very important day for humanity. We all have a collective responsibility towards our planet as envisioned by Prime Minister Sri Narendra Modi, there is need to have a symbiotic relationship with our environment and our nature. This is reflected across numerous initiatives which the country has taken under its leadership. India has not just acted to mitigate climate change but has displayed strong commitment and leadership for a sustainable planet, one where our actions are measured with the impact on the environment. However, we must realize that just as people are responsible for climate change, it is the people who can solve it. We talk about nations taking action as part of their climate goals, but ultimately it is people and their individual actions which have a huge impact. The Prime Minister has given us a vision of embracing a lifestyle for environment that is life. He has highlighted this on numerous platforms including a COP26. It is Prime Minister Modi's belief that unless we change individual behavior, we cannot combat climate change. We may keep thinking about long-term goals but we need to change our lifestyles in the short term. This is crucial. We now have a short perspective on the Prime Minister's vision for life which we would like our global audience to view. It is our home. It is 4.5 billion years old and the only home we have. We are only one among 8.7 million species and over the centuries we have changed our planet. We have made great strides in science and technology. We have comfortable lives but all of this has come at a cost. Our actions are harming the planet. They are changing the climate, destroying ecosystems and killing living beings. Wildlife populations have declined by 68% since 1970. Air, land and water, we have used every natural resource and left it either polluted or extinct. Microplastics are now found from the deepest oceans to the highest peaks. If we do not reduce our plastic consumption drastically it is estimated that by 2050 there will be more plastic in the ocean than fish. Things are at the tipping point. Every choice that we make, every action that we take echoes in the natural world long after we are gone. Today we stand at a juncture that was chosen for us by those who came before us. This is a critical time in the history of our planet and we must make the right choices. India has always inspired the world with innovative solutions to complex problems. Sustainability is embedded in the Indian way of life in our tradition and culture. From an ambitious net zero by 2030 target for Indian railways the fourth largest railway network in the world to the world's largest affordable LED for all initiative to transforming lives of millions of women by providing fuel, gas for cooking and heating to decarbonization through green hydrogen India is spearheading the quest for a sustainable planet. Act now. Close that tap. Switch off the engine. Recycle, nurture, grow, heal, breathe. We can resolve the climate crisis. The answer lies with us in the smallest of decisions that we take every day. Our choices will ripple through time and can heal our planet. We can choose to become pro-planet people. E, that is Lifestyle for environment. Today we all together with collective participation Lifestyle for environment means to make life like an expression. This environmental, conscious Lifestyle can be a mass movement. Today it can be mindless and destructive consumption Mindful and deliberate utilization. In the world millions of people every day's choices against climate change will lead to billions of steps. I would now like to invite on the occasion of the World Environment Day, the Minister of Environmental, Forest and Climate Change of the Government of India Mr. Bhupendra Yadav to give us opening remarks. Respected Prime Minister Shri. Narendra Modi Ji and the member of August Gathering It is a great pleasure for me to be a part of the human effort for environment. Especially today on the occasion of World Environment Day, I am its such an August audience. The occasion is a solemn reminder that the steps for environment protection are more needed now than ever. This year's World Environment Day theme is only one earth. A truth that is well known. Climate change is already impacting people's lives and livelihood. As a country under the leadership of Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi Ji we are committed to follow a growth that delivers sustainable development. We have made significant strides in every sphere despite our developmental challenges such as clean energy systems enhanced energy efficiency resilient urban infrastructure innovative and sustainable green transportation networks and planned afforestation. During the last eight years India has witnessed the fastest growth rate in renewable energy capacity, addition among all large economies. Today as the world face severe environmental crisis it is crucial that we find ways to combat it not just through modern technologies but with the wisdom of our collective cultural tradition and knowledge. The need of the hour is urging mindful and deliberate utilization. The present generation has to protect the rich natural treasure for future generation. Achieving sustainable patterns of consumption and production is critical if we are to overcome the planetary crisis of climate change. As we are intermittently linked with environment for survival the world must focus on conserving natural ecosystem collective effort are needed to chart a new low emission path. Most recently at COP26 in 2021 the honorable prime minister highlighted the importance of individual behavior change for catalyzing climate action as part of the life style for environment life movement the launch of life global call for action and reason to make the behavior change the center of climate action narrative in the world and make sustainable life style a global mass movement. With these words I extend my best wishes to all the people worldwide and hope that we can make collective and innovative effort to make our planet cleaner and greener. Thank you very much. Thank you honorable minister. I would now like to invite Mr. Bill Gates co-founder Microsoft and co-chairman Gates foundation a humanitarian who's been a key supporter of environmental and climate causes through his varying initiatives including the work on much which his foundation is undertaking in India he joins us from Seattle. Thank you Prime Minister Modi for inviting me to speak at the launch of this important initiative lifestyle for environment movement. This is a critical time in the fight against climate change people all over the world are already being affected by a warmer climate for example we've seen impacts like the catastrophic floods and unprecedented heat waves that have struck India and South Asia in recent weeks in a typical year the world is still emitting over 51 billion tons of greenhouse gases countries like the United States need to take the lead in reducing these emissions and making sure there's technologies that make it easier for all countries to do the same. I'm inspired by India's leadership and efforts to curb the rise in emissions and I was excited to learn about the life movement and its potential to draw in the full power of collective action to eliminate greenhouse gases we need innovative technologies and participation from all ensuring that these breakthrough technologies will be widely adopted will require not only large investments and partnerships between the private public sector but also demand from individuals individual actions will send market signals that encourage governments and businesses to invest in these new climate innovations and create the breakthroughs we need. The demand will ultimately bring down the cost of these technologies known as the green premium making clean technologies more affordable and accessible to everyone I congratulate Prime Minister Modi for taking the lead on this global initiative of citizen action to promote pro-climate behaviors. Together we can build a green industrial revolution one that stops climate change protects vulnerable communities and puts the world on a path to progress the necessity for collective global action to address climate change has never been greater an India's role and leadership are crucial in assuring we reach our climate goals. Thank you. Thank you Mr. Bill Gates. I now welcome Professor Gass Thunstain author of the Nobel Prize winning nudge theory and Robert Wansley Professor of Behavioral Science at Harvard University his research in the field of individual and social behavior change has been globally acknowledged. He joins us from Boston. Hello, it is a great honor to be with you today to celebrate the launch of the lifestyle for the environment movement. India and the Prime Minister have been world leaders with respect to environmental protection and climate change and human behavior and many of us all over the world are looking to India for inspiration and ideas. To celebrate the launch I'd like to speak a little bit about a framework which India has been using and which is being used all over the world for behavior change in connection with the environment and climate. It's called the EAST framework. It is an acronym E A S T The E stands for easy and the basic idea is if the goal is to help individuals or households or companies to choose an environmentally preferable approach to make it easy is often the best thing to do. The A is for attractive. If we have spirited colors if we have fonts and appearances that are attractive to people then we're more likely to see behavior change. India and other nations have often used attractiveness as a signal to promote environmentally preferable choices. S stands for social. If we know the social norm is in favor of environmentally better behavior or if we know people are increasingly engaged in environmentally preferable behavior we will see more of it. It creates a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy. Norms are essential for improving lifestyle. The T in the EAST framework is for timely. If people are given information or a reminder or a signal at exactly the right time when they're making the decision or maybe the hour before it's more likely to be effective. That's the EAST framework. I'd like to add one letter to the framework. The letter is F so we have a new acronym FIST and the F is for fun. Often environmentally preferred behavior, better lifestyles actually are fun. They make people smile. They feel they're contributing to their nation. We've seen this in India often in recent years. We've seen it in Europe also and sometimes in North America. It is really an honor to be able to speak to you on this historic event and I look forward to seeing new creativity and new initiatives with respect to FIST. Actually, are fun. They make people smile. The U.N. agencies are playing a leading role in combating climate change at the global level and are playing a key role in governments and institutions embracing environment friendly solutions. I now call upon Ms. Inga Anderson, Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Program to make her statement. She joins us from Stockholm. We are in the midst of a triple planetary crisis. The crisis of climate change the crisis of biodiversity loss and the crisis of pollution and waste. This is a crisis created entirely by decades of relentless and unsustainable consumption and production. Our current consumption patterns require 1.7 Earths to fulfill but we all know this is not possible because we have only one Earth. How we live and consume matters matters greatly. I welcome the launch by the Prime Minister of India of the Lifestyle for the Environment or Life Movement on World Environment Day because every person and every country needs to lead for the planet. With more than 1 billion people and home to a thriving generation of innovation and entrepreneurship India is central to global environmental action. We look forward to following your progress as you launch this hugely important movement because when India leans in the world watches and follows. We at UNEP look forward to supporting the Government of India and its people in pushing forward on the sustainable consumption and production agenda as India assumes a presidency of the G20 in 2023. Because we can all tread lightly on this planet and live in harmony with nature because we have only one Earth. Miss Inga Anderson I would now like to invite the Administrator of the United Nations Development Program Akin Stena to deliver his remarks on the occasion of the World Environment Day and the Global Launch of the Life Movement. He joins us from New York. Excellencies Ladies and Gentlemen It is a great privilege to join his accent to the Prime Minister of India Shree Narendra Modi and other distinguished guests for the launch of the Lifestyle for Environment Global Call for Ideas and Papers on World Environment Day. It takes place as the world came together at Stockholm Plus 50 to celebrate the world's many environmental accomplishments since the year 1972. In those 50 years the world has concluded over 500 multilateral environmental agreements. Yet we all know that we must do better as our natural world continues to be degraded and destroyed while climate change intensifies. The United Nations is working side by side with countries and communities helping them to decarbonize and restore our natural world while driving forward human development. For instance, through our climate promise UNDP is supporting over 120 countries to enhance and now implement their nationally determined contributions under the Paris Agreement. And countries like India are serving as a kinetic energy behind decisive climate action on the world stage. That includes its work through cutting-edge initiatives such as the International Solar Alliance the Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure and One Sun, One World, One Grid which aims for interconnected solar energy infrastructure at a global scale. Last year at COP26 in Glasgow Prime Minister Modi advanced the idea of lifestyle for environment or life. I hope on the idea that individual behavior and action are a key part of our collective climate responsibility. It aims to attract some of the world's very best solutions to drive climate friendly behavior amongst individuals and communities from grassroots innovators to academia to international organizations and beyond. As ever please continue to rely on the support of the United Nations and UNDP as we help to make life a global movement to change the way we live. Like nature all of us must now be part of a metamorphosis to secure the future of both people and planet. Thank you. Thank you Mr. Akinstena. Now let us hear from the institutions which are driving the global discourse on climate change. I would like to invite Mr. Anidas Gupta CEO and President of the World Resources Institute WRI delivers remarks. WRI has helped develop practical solutions to improve people's lives and works to ensure that nature thrives. Mr. Anidas Gupta joins us from Washington DC. What a wonderful, wonderful location. It's a privilege to be part of it. I want to congratulate India and Prime Minister Modi for this exciting launch and thank you for paving the way for a much needed global movement, a much needed global conversation on how we live, how we consume, how we take care of the planet. The science can be clear we consume 100 billion tons of raw material every year as a planet today. Only 8.6% of it is circular or turns around. As you heard from Inger there's not enough planet for us to live the way we live. It's clear circularity or how we actually consume, how we live has to be part of the solution. For us to get to where we are in 2022 to get to 2030 or 2050 goals of the world every lever of change has to change. That means also very much how we live, how we consume how we take care of our lives is very important. I can't overemphasize the importance you put to bring people to the movement it doesn't mean consuming less for everyone Prime Minister very correctly says it means thoughtful utilizations. It actually might mean consuming more for some there are 800 million people in the world who don't have a standard electric connection. It's thoughtful utilization. For 100 years I think we have connected success of prosperity with consumption. I see this movement Prime Minister is reversing that and value-taking kind of planet as success and prosperity. I can't overemphasize the importance of India launching this movement. India today is about consumed per capita one-third of the global average of consumption or emission. So where the world needs to go is towards where India is not the other way around. And it's not just emission in India. India and his ancient society is across the world due to necessity and due to wisdom have found ways to live with nature to thrive nature, to take care of nature. That knowledge needs to be part of our collective knowledge now. We have made for a long time difference in what science says and we have called it traditional knowledge. There is no gap. This needs to be actually connected together as our collective wisdom how we can learn from history for multiple generation of knowledge. At WRI, I just want to say we absolutely hear your call. We have set up a behavioral science unit you've heard about not just now how behavior science can help climate change. We absolutely work with Amitabh and his team on multiple things including training the next generation of 5,000 leaders for your call to get where India needs to get to in Glasgow. I just want to say we absolutely need policy. We need finance. We need innovation as Bill Gates just said. But what we need more than that as people all of us demanding more demanding faster cleaner world faster change. I just want to congratulate Prime Minister Modi for your call to change all of us from consumers to stewards of the world. This call could not be more noble or more timely than today and then I think all of us especially WRI to support you in every way we can. Thank you. Thank you Mr. Das Gupta. I would now like to invite Lord Nicholas Stern who's the chairman of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the head of India Observatory at the London School of Economics. Lord Stern is the global voice on the economics of climate change. I invite you Lord Stern to share your views with us. Thank you Prime Minister for the honour of inviting me to be with you on this special day. Your landmarks in November last year at COP26 in Glasgow set out an inspiring vision for a new part of development for India. It will be the development and growth story of the 21st century both raising living standards across the whole community and in your words saving the future of our future generations. Let us make no mistake unmanaged or weekly managed climate change would be devastating to the lives and livelihoods of our children and their children. India is vulnerable and India's special position in the world profoundly influences what others do. At the heart of your vision Prime Minister fostering sustainable lifestyles that are in harmony with and enhance the environment in contrast to the inefficient, dirty and destructive models by the rich countries in the past. The creation of this new path will involve strong investment innovation and action across the whole economy and society involving all communities and individuals. We can and must change the way we heat and cool our buildings, how we move around how we eat, grow our food and how we protect and invest in our precious natural capital on which our livelihoods depend. We must act strongly to use and reuse our resources much more efficiently and eliminate waste across the board. Most of this action will happen in households and private firms and farms the time for action is now. How can all this come about? Public action can and must enable and incentivize private action. For example, as we encourage more public transport, cycling and walking, we must invest in our towns and cities to make these possible. We must create the investment conditions of local infrastructure that can facilitate household and enterprise investment in solar energy or in precise and sustainable agriculture. I've had the privilege of working on and in India for nearly 50 years and I've seen firsthand the extraordinary creativity of the India from small village to big city. They can surely realize this vision for a new lifestyle and stronger sustainable and resilient development. The transition will require substantial investment from agricultural holdings to city metro lines. And the transition must be just to make the great opportunities available to all and to protect the vulnerable. All this requires finance, public and private, internal and external. Our own analyses at the London School of Economics on the necessary external finances for developing countries majority private finance are in broad agreement with the one trillion per annum you identified in your Glasgow speech. All friends of India must stand ready to support this vital new initiative. Thank you Prime Minister for your outstanding leadership. Thank you Lord Nicola Stern. If individuals can make an impact, so can nations. For nations to make impact at a large scale financing environment friendly infrastructure projects is of essence. And World Bank is leading from the front. I would now like to invite World Bank President Mr. David Malpass to deliver his address. Mr. David Malpass is a distinguished global economist and joins us from New York. Thank you very much. Honorable Prime Minister Modi, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen on the occasion of the World's Environment Day and in honour Minister Modi's focus on lifestyle for the environment and his call for papers. I've guided to the ancient texts of India and enlightened by their great effect for the natural world and the environment. The words of the Rig Veda the Yajur Veda speak of trees moving pollution of not disturbing the sky and of the importance of forests to the strength of the state. The Bhagavad Gita also clear when it says the environment is not ours to take or leave, it is ours to make. We can ask how and the Gita speaks to our heart with precedence. Let the human community protect the environment for their own survival. In these words, I see a call for action, not inaction. I saw this urgency during my participation with Prime Minister Modi in 2019 at the Civil Service Capacity Building event in Gujarat. Mobilizing and empowering communities around sustainable growth and development is at the heart of the World Bank's work and the Prime Minister's movement of the masses against environmentally destructive behavior. I will focus today on the question of what the state can do to mobilize communities at for sustainable economic growth and development. To begin with, any mobilization of communities around development issues requires frontline motivators who focus on children in rural areas, self-help groups of women mobilized around access to credit, and Asha health workers. These are examples of frontline workers who are embedded in communities and work at scale. The Poshan program of IND, owes its success to the frontline workers fighting malnutrition affecting children, adolescent girls and expectant mothers. Localizing to the community level has been an important part of India's development philosophy. The white revolution which changed the dairy industry was analyzed by the cooperatives managed by communities. Similarly, the Swatch Bharat Sanitation program relied on behavior change and community ownership of the mass action in an integral part of its progress. In the context of adaptation to climate change India faces one of its biggest challenges in the movement of water and land. India is one of the most water stressed countries in the world with demand projected to nearly double by 2050. Faced with decades of over exploitation of groundwater India's Atal Bujal Yojana is incentivizing communities to collectively take responsibility for groundwater management. Success will require behavior changes in agricultural practices, water conservation and land preservation. Dressed the problem of the commons, it offers local decision making where local administrations and communities jointly take responsibility for better water management and with the goal of doubling farmers incomes, improving water use efficiency on a mass scale and improving cropping patterns. Frontline motivators embedded in communities will be needed to help bring about the many necessary changes in behavior and incentives. Getting prices right remains a vital prerequisite for changing behaviors of communities and strengthening the economy. Farmers will have little incentive to preserve groundwater in states where free electricity is the cost of pumping groundwater close to zero. Other key building blocks for sustainable development will be more correct pricing of diesel fuel, fertilizer, coal, improving fuel efficiency and shifting transport from road to rail and waterways. Getting institutions right is also a vital prerequisite. Distorted prices cause weak institutions of service delivery and vice versa. Free electricity contributes to financially weak electricity distribution companies, the DISCOMS. Their weakness leads to greater dependence on state subsidies, inviting weaker governance and management. Weak DISCOMS in turn can become the Achilles heel of the government's plan to expand energy. An ineffective DISCOMS system can't implement the ambitious vision of 500 gigawatts of renewable energy and profitable electric vehicle and battery factories. Alongside community motivators, mobilizing communities around development and climate related issues will require more effective local governments and local administration. The 15th Finance Commission has, for example, provided fiscal incentives for cities to fight air pollution. But this program assumes the presence of effective urban local governments, or at the very least, urban local administration. To help support change, India has an imperative system of cash and non-cash transfers that forms the foundation of a strong social protection system using a unique ID mechanism. Important for today's discussion, using cash transfers to mobilize and incentivize communities around specific development issues allows the state to reduce the reliance on subsidies and artificial prices. Communities facing shocks due to pandemics or climate changes can be supported by targeting specific groups such as farmers and women headed households. India has also one of the world's largest food distribution systems, which during the peak provided support to 800 million people. Prime Minister Modi is right that communities have successfully mobilized around development programs and can more. The state must play its role by leveraging frontline workers and investing in effective and accountable local governments, which are the of the state that is closest to citizens. And vitally important, the state must get pricing policies and institutions right in order to credibly fight communities to participate in development programs as part of a mass movement. After all, we cannot expect to mobilize communities to advocate for public transport when public sector bus companies are inefficient at best. Or to farm in a sustainable way when public sector buses or subsidies distort behavior. Or to conserve water when free electricity tells you to do otherwise. India has a long history of community mobilization that is worked, but also instances when it has not worked. For India to be a global leader in environmental action, it also has to be a global leader in economic development. The Prime Minister is correctly aware of the fact that this is an economic approach for a whole of life approach. It makes sense that this will need a whole of economy approach. Ending poverty, the incomes of farmers and ordinary people properly pricing water electricity, fertilizer, coal and oil and making the right investments in cities. We look forward to supporting this with a whole of World Bank programs. Today's call for papers offers the opportunity to use scholarly work to understand better how policies and institutions matter in incentivizing and leveraging communities around development issues. Let us not lose this learning opportunity being offered here today by Prime Minister Modi who said recently that once people are determined to do something together, they do wonderful things. Thank you very much. Thank you Mr. David Malpass for your thought provoking and inspirational words. Now it is my honor to invite the Honorable Prime Minister of India, Srinarendra Modi who has conceptualized this life movement who has displayed through climate leadership and who has led transformational grass root level initiators from the front. From Swachh Bharat Abhyal to the Namami Ganga program from Ujjala to Ujjwala from faster adoption of electric mobility to green hydrogen to give it up campaign and save the rain initiators. Through his vast path-breaking measures he has been a great driver of individual and community behavioral change. I request you sir to address India on the world, on the occasion of the world environment day and launch the life-global call for action. Honorable Prime Minister sir We just heard the insightful views of our Excellency Inger Anderson UMP Global Head His Excellency Aakram Steiner UNDP Global Head My friend Mr. David Malpass President of the World Bank Lord Nicholas Stern Mr. Kaas Sanastrin My friend Mr. Bill Gates Anil Das Gupta India's Environment Minister Sri Bhupendra Yadav I thank them for the views Ladies and gentlemen Dear friends Namaste Today's occasion and the data of the occasion and the date of the occasion both are very relevant we begin the life lifestyle for environment movement these years well environment day campaign slogan is only one earth and the focus area is living sustainably in harmony with nature the seriousness and the solution are beautifully covered in these phrases friends our planet's challenges are well known to all of us the need of our each human centric collective efforts and robust action that further sustainable development at the COP26 this last year summit in Glasgow I proposed for mission life lifestyle for environment efforts for such a mission received support from all across the world I am glad that the resolution of the life movement is being realized today my gratitude for such a record support as the name suggests mission life puts individual and collective duty on all of us to do whatever we can for a better planet the vision of life is to live a lifestyle that is in tune with our planet and does not harm it and those who live such a lifestyle are called pro-planet people mission life borrows from the past operates present and focuses on the future friends the secret behind the earth's long life is the harmony our ancestors maintain with nature when it comes to tradition almost all parts of the world have traditions a simple and sustainable solution to environmental problems in Ghanang traditional norms have helped in total conservation in the Serengeti region of the Tanjania elephants and bush bugs are sacred thus they have suffered from illegal hunting the Agpaga and Agriki trees are special in Ethiopia in Japan there is furoshiki which could be a sustainable alternative to plastic Sweden's lagom philosophy encourages a balanced life we in India equated nature with divinity our gods and goddesses have plants and animals associated with them I have given just a few examples there are many more such practices reduce reuse and recycle are the concept woven in our life circular economy has been integral part of our culture and lifestyle friend thanks to our 1.3 billion Indians we have been able to do many good things for the environment in our country our forest cover is increasing and so is the population of lions tigers leopards elephants and rhinos our commitment to reach 40% of installed electricity capacity from non fossil fuel based sources has been achieved 9 years ahead of schedule about 370 million LED bulbs have been distributed in the last few years this has contributed to energy saving of about 50 billion units of electricity per year it has also ensured a reduction of almost 40 million tons of carbon dioxide per year we have achieved 10% ethanol building in petrol 5 months ahead of the November 22 target this is a major accomplishment given the blending was hardly 1.5 in 2013-14 and 5% in 2019-20 this has enhanced India's energy security reduce crude bill import for more than 5.5 billion dollars it has also reduced carbon dioxide emissions by 2.7 million tons and it has increased income of farmers by almost 5.5 billion dollars renewable energy is becoming a widely popular and our government has a very high focus for development of this sector friends the way ahead is all about innovation and openness at every level let us encourage innovators focusing on the sustainable development technology can be a great supporter to achieve this in addition and technology meet the vision of life will be taken further especially earths those in the academic world researchers and our dynamic start-ups to think about this their youthful energy is exactly what the world needs at this crucial time we should also be open to sharing our best practices with others and learning from the successful practices of others Mahatma Gandhi talk about a zero carbon lifestyle in our daily life choices let us pick the most sustainable options let us follow the principle of reuse reduce and recycle our planet is one but our efforts have to be many one earth many efforts friends India stands ready to support any effort for a better environment and to further global wellness our track record speaks for itself we are proud to have taken the lead in making yoga more popular initiative like the interest of solar lands the focus on one sun one world one grid the coalition for disaster resilient infrastructure are making major contributions we are glad that the world is supporting this efforts I am sure that the life movement will further unite us and ensure a secure further for the coming generations I once again invite the world to be a part of this journey together let us make our planet better let us act together it is time for action action for life action for lifestyle for environment thank you thank you very much