 Now we're going to travel a little north to our Philippines network, where we will learn about some of these sustainable solutions our members there are implementing. This is going to be another about 15 minute long video and as a reminder for those of you who are just joining us, if you have called in you unfortunately will not be able to hear the video sound. And then for those of you on your computer, if you can't see the video just check to make sure it isn't hidden behind another application of your computer. I am Guy to share with you the sustainable solutions of Mapua and I can say that this is a holistic approach that we are trying. So we have created a web page in our website and we named it at the sustainability. So we put everything there, what we are doing and how we comply with the 17 sustainable development goals. We have programs, academic programs that address the SDGs and we put up concert centers as well. The programs for our senior high school that address SDGs, the 17 SDGs as well. And this senior high school is coming to research. Even our research agenda are being placed on the platform of SDGs. And the research outputs that we have are being disseminated, emphasizing the importance of research and how it provides solutions to societal problems. Our researches are being focused on, like for example this water quality in Laguna Lake because Laguna Lake is being used for domestic supply, being used for agriculture, being used for agriculture and for industry. And also we have a couple of projects in focusing on the UK and in Morocco, addressing environmental problems and health. So we disseminate those and we wanted to show the society that we are trying to research to address societal problems in our country. And we are cooperating with international organizations and research universities and institutes to develop our research companies as well. Thank you for your attention. For this session I am presenting two solutions. So the project is called Smart Sustainable Transit Project for GDPC. The first project which I am discussing now aims to address limited data availability, expensive data gathering and hence transport planning capacities of LGUs in development agencies through the development of software tools for data gathering and analysis. This is a joint project of four higher education institutions in the country and a foundation of multidisciplinary expertise. How is the commitment involved? The output of the project relies on a successful partnership between the local government unit, local partner university and the main coordinating institution which is DELAS University. Partner universities are tapped to carry out the household surveys needed to give the database their capital dates that are trained to conduct the research. On the other hand, our users are tapped to facilitate the conduct of the surveys as they are also involved in the planning phase of the project. The innovation here is really what we call knowledge partnerships between universities and their local government units. The idea is in the era of sustainable development goals. The knowledge development and solutions development should be a collective option which requires collaboration. Wherein, local knowledge and technical knowledge to be able to manage the moving is equally important in development. The tools to empower LGUs with regard to how they plan and evaluate to transport infrastructure and policy projects. If the LGUs need to propose a new infrastructure and policy project to improve transportation quality in their city, they can begin by cutting various transport indicators in the back. Through this, they can determine which specific areas specifically preventions and what kind of interruptions are needed. On the other hand, if a private sector proposes a new transportation infrastructure policy project to the LGU, the LGU can use the same tool to assess the potential potential project through our inter-applications. It also aims to provide data analytics and smart features to the LGU by determining the path and worst scoring indicators in the city and suggesting potential new processes of these issues. This maze is here for the LGU to know what issue to solve and how to handle it. The second project is about development of this smart electric chip system, an Egypt field management system. This project is in support of the public energy modernization initiative. The impact of this project encompasses passengers, drivers and field managers. The field management system ensures the efficient and timely deployment of Egypt's by monitoring real-time passenger accounts on board the jeepneys and terminals. The passenger-facing app gives estimated arrival times of jeepneys at the decimating terminals and real-time passenger accounts of each jeepney. Thank you very much. Today, we have a bucket-disciplinary research project on coastal cities at risk of investing in climate and disaster resilience. The objective of the project is to enhance the capacities of coastal cities to analyze and understand the complexity of this. Many government agencies, including local government units, try to address the problems, many sustainable development problems in terms of sign-offs. One of the objectives of the project is to increase the understanding of how all of these complex problems actually come together. Eventually, they also identify pathways towards resilience to evidence in part of the whole partnership. One of the objectives of the program is to develop evidence-informed resilience plans for specific cities. The illustration actually here just shows you the relationship and the processional flow of time to generate knowledge on climate and disaster resilience. These are the three main project components that we're undertaking. One is to collect and analyze data on extreme weather events in these four different cities. And second also is to examine certain biophysical impacts of climate and extreme events. What are the health and physical impacts now, immediate impacts of disasters? Second also important component, so in the middle, is actually to develop resilience models to help these local government units look at disasters as a systems dynamics in terms of assistance. And then also to enhance also the visualization and analysis and communication of these locations. But at the same time, this project also aims to try to develop new thought leaders also in disaster resilience. So there is a Masters in Disaster Risk and Resilience program that is also associated with the project. So many of our research teams actually coordinate with sub-students who are also doing research, either Masters and also we coordinate with the private sector to do the national resilience counts. So some of our research outputs include the development of practice and research beefs which can set to the policymakers at the local government level. Some of us are working also on journal articles to identify causes and impacts of disasters at the city level. The institutional outputs that we want these local government units to have after the project is that we hope that they have a science-based city disaster resilient plan. Resilient suite of systems thinking tools that we want to deal with them. And an economic model that tries to analyze the impact of disasters on business. Geospatial data on impacts on infrastructures. And hopefully to be able to have some things or interns at the local government level who can analyze all of these things. Actually, my main personality is Alianza Rebota. I spent full time two years getting all the farmers and fish grown together called Alianza Rebota. And we have 32 federations and organizations from the people who marched about to make the asking for the revenue. The people involved in science, all of you. And the instruction is what is the solution. Goal number one, no poverty. And goal number two, clean wars energy. But I'd like to say that what interests me this day is that I've been hearing all these solutions today and I was asked the same question. Are they using your solutions? And you know the way it is asked. You are the ones to provide information with the answers. We don't know the answers. And so the farmers want to know the answers. But you have to ask us what is our question. But I mean, they don't want to communicate these things, right? No poverty. What we did actually since we left is our alliance, which is farmers. We got agribusiness. Okay, they know how to process without posing with nothing. We have science. The professor is UPLD. What was given you by Brother Armin at UPLD, I managed that thing. Seven books I have. The second one is this water encachment. We get 4% and you get 60%. Now, what's sustainable? And they talk about this all the time. This network has now shown why our group, our government gets 4% despite all the orders. And the last slide is FBI. This thing in Europe, they do sustainable reporting. Why is that important for this network? I mean, this network has got the credibility that you have got the people that are brilliant guys like Armin and Zebra. And this thing is getting distracted, right? If this network concentrates on this, right? And finds out who's screwed up and what they can do. This is it. Why am I excited? I'm excited because this marks the beginning of something very important. We began years ago. Now we can get someone from the good school called Ateneo. We're going to give it time and focus. And for me, I'm the CSO, right? This is a business CSO. We want to get from the network what other people do not give. For example, helping farmers. Oh God, see, I'm not interested in your helping farmers. We do that. But you can help farmers in a way that's not happening. Not just that. That's it. And you've got to tell all the people, right? Irrigation, et cetera. We know the answer. Pull up, pull up. So in summary, my doctorate is called the transfer of training into the real world or the transfer of this network's knowledge, which will assemble and crystallize and give it to us. And we are the ones who are going to get it. And I'm looking forward to working with you guys on this and what I've seen is great. And the last thing I'm going to say is this, right? This, I asked the question, do they understand it, right? Because in the long run, we can understand it. So I want this network to get something that will understand that we can use. Thank you. This is a coalition that seems to address the core issue of water. We have, developing is a lot of water. But the real problem actually is the water that we have may not be the quality water that our population would need. The high goal of these issues is something structural. And that is if you try looking at the different agencies in the Philippines that's water related, they compete with each other and that's part of the big problem. There is already a water shortage. The fact is it will be worse. No government, no agency will declare the urgency of this crisis. And I think part of the role of the Water Alliance is to actually get a group to name the problem because the solution actually is around the corner. And our role in partnership with the many other groups in the Philippines is to actually bring the four nations and help people to work together. There are four main areas. There is a cluster, a group, we call it group one, that works on providing water for waterless communities. Mostly volunteer work, working with the Barangay or the LGU, maybe pipes, water source and proceeded with an actual study of the water source. Second group work with companies themselves, especially those that have a lot of views for water and help them track their water footprint and obviously to work towards reduction. The third group is the advocacy group. They lobby with Congress, with LGUs and the national agencies for issues about policy on water. And then lastly, this is where the universities come together. There are many maps in the Philippines and in data sets. But you need several data sets pulled together to be able to understand the issue of water. By bringing two groups to intersect and allow the data to speak for itself. And the work of the water liars is to actually bring together the group and then curate it so it becomes easily usable by those who implement policy and those who actually work on it. So we invite you, please join us. I am sure you will be happy to work on a water solution. Now that is just one of the many solutions forum that SDSN has been putting on across our networks to showcase all of the sustainable solutions of our 1200 plus members. So keep an eye out for a solutions forum around your local network.