 The Nile Basin is dealing with natural resource, basically. We have addressed issues pertaining to soil fertility, land degradation, deforestation, and above all we have identified feed resource as a free grazing as a main issue. So we are dealing with free grazing. Free grazing is a sort of extensive farming where livestock have access to graze everywhere. So in so doing they are disturbing the ecosystem. We are planting this forage, improved forage on the common grazing areas. We are also developing strategies, different strategies that we are planting around the backyard. We are also treating crop reuse using burials as an enrichment. At all basins should need to have a commitment in changing the lives. There are lessons that we can draw from other innovation platforms in Africa and at the same time that they can draw from ours. That means the Nile Basin. Because the way we are establishing the innovation platform is a little bit more formal. Based on baseline surveys and trying to identify stakeholders and putting these all stakeholders together to identify the actual problem and then go forward for the solution and then implementing what is prioritized by the farmers, especially the stakeholders too. Therefore the way we are moving along to establish the innovation platform and change it into implementation will be done from the other side because the limpo-po basins are trying to raise the natural resource issues. But I don't know, the link is very indirect while they are trying to emphasize on value chain. But ours is directly related to the natural resource issue, especially the land. With little help in terms of technologies, transfer of technologies which includes input of different types, whether it is fertilizer or input seed or improved livestock, if you put some effort on, they can have the capacity to change their lives and the whole continent.