 A comment first, I was a student of Chris Christensen a long time ago. He was the pioneer that worked with China even before there were formal relations between Australia and China. I think it's very, very, very good collaborations. NFAS is the biggest task code and of course it's very easy. NFAS also sort of has this peculiarity. It's very big so it's unlike any conventional antenna or telescope. So in order for it to move and point to somewhere, you essentially have to move close to a thousand panels and each is the size of a normal room, 11 meters on one side. So FARS found lots of poster candidates and some of them are in the southern hemisphere and we have parks so we can do the confirmation and follow up observations for FARS. It's very efficient and productive to send it to our colleagues, particularly the parks telescope who has been doing this for decades. We started the collaboration from the SK project with Australia many, many decades ago China has FARS as another concept for the SKA but as a single dish, the largest one in the world, FARS can do some complementary observations of studies together with ISCAP, MIR, MWA and also the future SKA arrays. We're also looking into the future, that is the biggest surface, the most sensitive telescope and we make some of the most sensitive receivers as well. So marrying that together it's obvious that we're going to reach things that nobody else has reached before.