 The Sustainable Development Goals are a huge opportunity for the water industry to make a difference to people's lives, but also to improve their businesses. But if we're going to achieve the goals, we're going to have to change some of the things we do. We've got to be much more interdisciplinary. We have to look at the linkages across the Sustainable Development Goals, and we also have to understand what motivates people's behaviour much better. I believe that water can play a key role in the next 15 years, but we're going to need to understand people's motivations, we're going to need to influence the political process, and we're going to need to be much more interdisciplinary in the way we think. I wanted to tell people that we have concrete solutions if we work well all together. Obvious challenges are very high, politicians, stakeholders sometimes do not have the full understanding of all the solutions and all the issues we have to deal with, but I'm very optimistic on the fact that we can improve all together the way we provide water and the way we treat water. We talked about Sustainable Development Goals, and it was very interesting, it's quite a big challenge to face in terms of the whole world actually, and how the water industry can actually tackle the Sustainable Development Goals and move forward. It's about innovation, it's about working together, bringing people all together around the same table. Well, Goal 6 has a number of indicators in it, but the part that's really transformational is about everyone in this ward having access to those services, and without that the overarching goal of the Sustainable Development Goals, which is 2030, eradicating extreme poverty, can't happen. So it's absolutely essential for that broad goal, but also for the other goals, for education, for health, for gender issues, women's empowerment, it's all about partnership and climate change. So I believe it's possible. Look at the change that's happened in the last 20 years, it can happen, but it does need huge amount of political commitment, investment, innovation and behaviour change. We need those who make things happen, and this is on the one side, I would say the consciousness side, these are the NGOs and the governmental agencies, we need the solution providers and technology providers as well. Congress is part of speeding up to coming from a linear growth to an exponential growth, and they will profit from this development. That is actually going to work for your local community, so for me, for New South Wales, it's about trying to make sure that we have good governance and policy, it's really about making sure that the science and the evidence base actually informs good policy and decision making for water resource management. Come connect, contribute, share your experiences and your stories of IWA, where our graphic facilitator will be capturing your stories, translating them into a graphic which you can then share also an IWA connect via the app and on your desktop, beyond the event.