 I am Ángel González, I'm from Spain and I have been following here, or I am following the master in hydrology and water resources. What I achieved after this is really fulfilling my expectations in many senses, in particular, I came here looking for a really international and diverse environment to study, and this is what I'm finding so far. I'm really enjoying the diversity in students, both in background, nationality, culture, etc., so I think in that sense this school really stands out as one place to be and to deal with the problems of water which are essentially multidimensional. What I'm learning here, or I am discovering, the essential in water problems is that they call them wicket problems in the sense that it is very even difficult to define the problem themselves, even more difficult to find solutions to them. So really the approach is in which manner we can look into those problems from a multidimensional perspective. I'm going to do a study on alluvial aquifers in Northern Ethiopia, in the region of Tigray, and I'm actually going there next week. I'm really looking forward to that, the essence of what I want to do is to work in the field to really deal with the real problems. To what extent the water resources in that area, which is an area characterized by water scarcity, so to what extent water resources could be enough to ensure agricultural production and food security. So it's quite a relevant question, and I'm really excited to participate with a little bit of my input, which is obviously very small, but to participate into that kind of problem is really a source of inspiration. Well I think really it is an institution which is quite unique. I think you can find places in the world where you will find more technicality in specific areas where you are going to be dealing with really high end kind of problems. Here the specificity that you are going to see a lot of people from different regions in the world, you are going to interact with them. There are not so many institutions in the world where you can do that, so if you are looking for that, if you are looking for maybe more development kind of problems, then this is certainly a place to be. I am very keen as a consultant through an NGO or through a research institution to participate into that formulation of the problems and then looking for solutions. So I'm very excited actually to get into that new phase. As you know from our previous interviews, I'm coming from a very different perspective, which was the private sector in the oil and gas. And now I'm looking for a new phase in my life and I really think it is quite interesting to merge those worlds. I think there's a lot in the coming years about this interaction between the private sector and the public sector. So I do think I have an experience which is relevant. I don't think there are boundaries for water and the problems are very similar, so it is very important to learn from the problems on one side and to apply those solutions to other sides. So I think in essence the questions of water, I don't say the problems, but the questions, the challenges and the opportunities related to water, they don't know about boundaries, so I don't know about boundaries either. I think this is really one of the great opportunities today is that after so many years now we have a common agenda. Obviously the agendas are all the time they can be better defined or better improved. But just the fact of having the same agenda that everybody is working with those same elements in their eyes or to define their strategy or their vision, that is essential. So I think it helps also to communicate, to say our project in this case is trying to help this specific objective. Then you can find in which way it integrates with other objectives. So I think that is very important. The SDGs having a common agenda is the first step towards trying to find solutions.