 Hello and welcome from Mikkele in Finland. This is the second city where we go with our project city loops and this is part of what we call the stakeholder engagement workshops. This is one out of three and during these workshops we try to go inside of these seven cities that we have in city loops, try to better understand the two sectors that we're studying. One is construction, second is the organic flow or biomass sector and what we do in the seven cities is to try to understand the bigger picture, try to understand all of the flow rather than just the waste or rather than just what is happening in demonstrators in order to have the most impact, to really understand if the actions that we're doing have a bigger impact on the entire sector. That also helps us to upscale. If we know that these demonstrators are happening and we know that they work, we would then know where to put other demonstrators, what are the main priorities for future demonstrators. So I have to admit it's a tough exercise because of course we're talking about a system and system is quite broad and it can scare people away because of this more or less comprehensiveness or complexity. So we're trying our best to help stakeholders understand why it's so relevant to work at it and our point of view is that if you don't do that at the sector level then you can't really know what you decide upon or your decisions will be just a part of things. That's why we specifically spend a lot of time to define what is the system boundary? What's included in calculations? What's excluded from calculations? And when we exclude something from calculations to better understand, to better remember that your choices and your decision-making will be excluding one part of it. So we did the sector, the two sector-wide mapping this week, this yesterday and the day before here in Micheli and it was really interesting to figure out these two completely things, well these two completely sectors that are slightly interwoven of course because in Finland there is a lot of wood. So wood can be used, well is part of the biomass sector, but it also part of the construction sector. It's also very interesting to see how little we know about imports and exports, while we know a bit what's happening in our territory and most of the cities have difficulties to know where do things come from and therefore what can they do about it. So when we talk about circularity, of course, imports are just one part of the whole circularity and we want to cycle what's coming out of your city, but it's also good to know where does it come from and is it renewable and is it toxic, etc. The results that we get from these type of exercises are let me just show you these big diagrams where we start with the whole life cycle of the sector, so going from extraction to manufacturing, to use, to waste, but also imports, exports and how the waste is treated inside or outside. We get results such as this one. So this is an app where we can go from extraction here to a waste over here and the postage that you will see here are actually different things. We have flows but we also have actors. We have policies and studies. So we do not necessarily only want to learn what the flows are that are imported and exported from all the cities. We want to know who is controlling them, who knows a bit more information about it. The city has already done any studies, so we don't need to do this work all over again. And by putting all of these postage from all of the relevant stakeholders that had a lot of knowledge in their field, I think it also starts building collaboration between these stakeholders. We care about what you are doing because we can see ourselves in the system. We can see what you are doing. We can see what we are doing and we can see the benefit of collaborating or making synergistic actions. From our side, I think it was really interesting to see that this case study, the city, which has 53 to 55,000 inhabitants and holds a huge amount of land, of area. How do we tackle these lesser dense areas in Europe? Because infrastructures in general, in cities, are supposed to be dense, well, to provide dense areas. Over here we have something completely different. So it's really interesting to see the shift of it and how could we provide infrastructure that are not necessarily based on density, but also can provide the service to this wider area. In our case here in the biomass, for instance, I can see here there's a lot of wood, so even energy is produced with a lot of wood. And I was really surprised that Micaely already has its own well, biogas plants, but also wastewater treatment and a number of waste and resource recovery initiatives. There was the EcoSirdla Eco Park as well that is starting to be built. So for such a small city, well, sorry, 55,000 can seem small, but I was very impressed about the amount of infrastructure that they get. And I'm really curious what the results of this analysis one will get, the numbers will show us and the priorities that will transpire or manifest from it. That's it from Micaely. I hope you enjoyed. We'll continue to share our adventure with this City Loops project. Next time I'll see you in Bodo. That's this afternoon and probably tomorrow evening or on Friday. I'll try to report back. Thanks a lot and see you soon.