 My name is Hannah Reders, I'm from Germany and I'm currently doing the double degree in Development Economics with the University of Göttingen in Germany and the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa. I hope to gain a great network, I was already very happy to meet a lot of interesting and inspiring personalities here. I also hope to gain a lot of feedback for my research. My programs, especially like Assay Tide, are very important because they're deeply rooted in South Africa. My research is inspired by the pressure of climate change, unfortunately, and it's based in the province of Limpopo and I conducted quite some interviews with the first stage subsistence farmers in different villages to really get to feel in the field of agriculture what inequality actually means, like you have this highly technologized and experienced farmers that export and then the subsistence farmers that are purely rain-fed and somehow they still connect because they have the same problems, the same risks and the same political obstacles. The sub-Saharan African region in general needs a lot of investment in new technologies to farming. I'm afraid that the technological change will lead to the highly commercialized farmers to take off and leave the others further behind which would put further pressure on inequality even though there are new emerging technologies that really help farmers. It doesn't help everybody because it doesn't really reach the subsistence farmers. Hopefully in future, hopefully, hopefully develop an app for example that could help both sides and especially the subsistence farmers to emerge.