 So good afternoon everybody and welcome and thank you for coming. First I'll tell you about the center that I've set up in Bangladesh, it's called the International Center for Climate Change and Development, based at the University of the Independent University of Bangladesh. It's now six years since we set up, and it's a joint venture between IID and IUB, the Independent University of Bangladesh, where we are based, and a third organization called the Bangladesh Center for Advanced Studies. And as you know, I've since then been a senior fellow here at IID, but I'm seconded to Bangladesh to be the first director of the center, and get it up and running. We have a successful master's program in climate change and development. It's now in its fifth year. It's a one-year master's. It's meant to have students who would graduate and go into jobs or work in the development center, understanding the links between climate change and development, not necessarily make them into climate experts. So we take students with a wide variety of backgrounds. So we get each year around a dozen students, and we're hoping to start getting international students from next year. We have quite a few applications every year, but we need to be able to offer them scholarships. So we're hoping to start a couple from next year. Our annual academic year is from May to April. So May 2018, we're going to have the next six batch of master's students. The seats are front if people want to come. You don't have to step in the back. And we also do a lot of short courses for professionals. These are usually week-long courses for particular groups of people. The two that we have developed into an annual cycle are one on urban climate change. So we've been doing that with human settlements colleagues here in IID, David Dogman, Diane Archer and Sarah and others. We do that every May. So next May is going to be our sixth annual conference, a workshop or short course on urban climate change. And then we've been doing for the last few years an annual conference or not, a conference training course on climate finance, which Paul Steele has been with us and Neha has been involved in as well. So these short courses are quite often jointly with IID colleagues from across IID who come and help us run the courses. We also do others that we do on our own in Bangladesh. We do quite a lot of training and capacity building for others with government agencies, the Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Planning, the Environment Ministry, obviously, and various others. We're now reaching out to private sector and NGOs as well. We have an MOU with BRAC. We're trying to help them develop their climate change programs. So essentially a lot of our work is capacity building in various different forms. One of the things that we have been doing and it's become quite successful is offer to host international, what we call visiting researchers, but they're primarily students, master students or PhD students. Many come from the UK so I give lectures at universities here. They went yesterday in period collecting every year. So one or two of their students end up coming to Bangladesh to do their thesis there. So we have a guest house where we can put them up. In fact, a former visiting researcher here, Aaron Hulu, who spent more than a year in Bangladesh. Almost two years with us. And so we have a very nice group of young researchers a mix of Bangladeshi and international. Internationals come and go for various periods but Bangladeshis are there. I won't go into all the details of what we're doing but I would say that in the last five, six years that we've been established we have been able to establish a reputation both nationally and internationally as being at the center of excellence. Particularly on the issues that we work on which are adaptation to climate change and loss and damage from climate change. These two are sort of niche areas of research interest and we contribute to global knowledge and capacity building.