 I'm Roger Paskin. I'm the Chief Veterinary Officer for South Australia. I work for Biosecurity South Australia based in Adelaide. One Biosecurity is a joint industry government initiative aimed at maintaining and improving our state's biosecurity with the aim of improving and maintaining market access into the future, but also to ensure that we're insulated against diseases from outside. One Biosecurity has very much a farm focus. It's about what the producer does on farm. It's about giving the producer recognition for their good work in maintaining biosecurity. One Biosecurity is about future-proofing our industry. We realise that our markets are becoming ever more demanding. We boast about having a clean green product. This is not about boasting about the clean green product. This is about proving that we have a clean green product. The producers will be invited to register on the One Biosecurity web portal where they can declare their status, where they can make themselves known to other producers, where they can find out what other producers are doing and where they can buy livestock from producers who are implementing high biosecurity practices. What we're doing is we're creating a network of producers across the state who are known for their good practices and who are a known good source of livestock. We're shifting the assurance system to an online platform where producers can construct their biosecurity plans where they can actually put together their animal health statements. And if need be, they can print them out and take them with them to a livestock sale or they can be viewed online by purchasers at a sale or at an abattoir. So the platform is entirely mobile and it's accessible to everybody in the industry. The people we'd like to see signing up will be all producers who obviously have a pick, which they should have, and who are producers of dairy cattle, beef cattle and sheep. And also agents and abattoirs. Well my message to producers right now is get involved. Biosecurity is everybody's business, but it does start on the farm.