 The Global Rights Science Partnership, or GRISP, as we call it, was approved early November in 2010, so since January it has become fully operational, and I think we are all very happy that we have been able to implement it in a very smooth and effective manner until now in the first nine or ten months. I think what it already has shown is a much higher, whole new level of scientific interaction, communication among scientists that has also led to many new initiatives across the globe, so sometimes we may have been thinking in the past too much about our own regions or the countries that we're working in, and we see now a much more increased level of interactions and also a new range of partnerships across the different world regions. Like overall, as the person overseeing or coordinating the implementation, I'm very pleased with the progress that has been made. I think we've put the mechanisms in place for an effective new research and development structure. We have, I think, a very unique approach in the sense that we are emphasizing a more product-oriented R&D structure, but still also having enough room and flexibility to enhance breakthroughs in science to also allow people to explore and discover. So we've had a series of workshops during the year that have focused on developing more clearer plans and ideas for a range of new global initiatives that only can be accomplished by many institution scientists from many institutions working closely together worldwide. So steps are now taken to starting to implement those and also funds are being raised or have already been allocated on a priority manner for those new activities. I think we are also extremely happy to have been able to, for the first time really in many years, award a significant number of new scholarships. PhD scholarships now have been awarded under the Global Rights and Scholarship Program, one of our new capacity-building efforts to 31 students, including from Africa, Asia, Latin America, Europe. So that has been a significant effort and I think we are all looking forward to the impact this will have in terms of having a new generation of young people engaged or getting them engaged in right sides. We've also developed a whole new monitoring and evaluation strategy and I think I'm most pleased to say that so far we've implemented this very large global program with a volume of nearly 100 million dollars per year without creating any new offices or new bureaucracy layers. So we've tried to do it in a very efficient manner. Yes, so in summary I think we've put the pieces in place, GRISP is functioning very well, people are starting to realize the benefits of it, both the scientists involved and hopefully also our partners and the donors. So 2011 in many ways has been a learning year but also a transition year, 2012 will be the year that I think will see us move even much faster. We have many things that have started, we will launch a whole range of new initiatives, also called on a more competitive basis for new frontiers research, new partnership developments. So what I would like to see is an increased level of participation and also more partners stepping forward and say we believe that we can take a lead role or a leadership role in this particular line of work or in this because this is a comparative strength we have and therefore we can also contribute more own resources. So I think we still have a lot of potential to leverage co-investments, to mobilize more resources and through that also even expand the whole network and gain more impact faster. So I think the basis is there, the mechanisms are there and we are open to work with anyone who wants to work with us.