 Today is Thursday, the 11th of December, the second last day of the cup, tomorrow, Friday, the 12th of the last day. We haven't had a huge amount of progress in negotiating the text. Negotiations went in up to about 2 a.m. last night and didn't resolve a great deal. They probably will do the same again late into tonight, although the ministers are now engaged as Secretary of State Kerry is in town, Al Gore is in town, Vanity Moon is in town. So it's gone to the high political level. Residents and Prime Ministers are involved in finalising some kind of a deal. We're not sure what it is. It will probably be revealed tomorrow. But we've had a lot of additional action. One of the things that the Lima COP presidency, the president and minister of Peru wanted to do, and I think they've done fairly well, is to have many other things happening in Lima. So there was a People's March in the city. Today there were a number of launches of actions by different countries, by governments, by companies, by civil society. And we want to build momentum, positive momentum, in terms of tackling climate change in the real world. As opposed to negotiating words on a piece of paper with negotiators too, and have been doing for the last 20 years. And the same negotiating positions are put forth year after year after year with very little change and very little progress. Not no progress, but very little progress. So hopefully in Peru we may break that mode. By tomorrow we may have a good Lima agreement. And at the same time a lot of momentum for action. One of the good things is that the government of Peru and the government of France, who are going to be hosting Paris COP next year, are together taking this actions program forward from Lima to Paris. And hopefully it will build even greater momentum in Paris next year. So even though things look dark in the negotiating rooms, hopefully there's light at the end of the tunnel, or as they say, it's darkest before the dawn. Tomorrow we shall find out if we actually have a dawn or not.