 We believe charter cities really address fundamental challenges that are facing humanity in the 21st century. My name is Mark Lutter. I'm the Founder and Executive Director of the Charter Seize Institute and I am an Emergent Ventures grantee. The EV project is a nonprofit I founded, the Charter Seize Institute. So I founded it about two years ago. Charter City is a new city with a special jurisdiction that allows it to adopt a more competitive business environment. And so if we look at the most successful cities in the post-war era, Singapore, Shenzhen, Hong Kong and Dubai, all of these had an important component of governance which allowed them to become more competitive and become the cities they are today. And generally, we believe this model is replicable throughout the world, particularly in Africa and Asia. What we do is provide thought leadership behind the idea of what charter cities are. How can you create these legal systems that attract investment, that create jobs, that generate economic growth? And then in addition to that, we use the networks that we're building to both help introduce projects to investors, to potential consultants, as well as provide technical assistance on some of the projects to help create these legal systems who currently we're working in both Zambia and Nigeria. In Zambia, we're working with a new city development called Mkhwashi. It was being built for about 100,000 residents. The first residents move in next year. And so we're working with them and the Zambian government to help make it easier to start a business, make it easier to pay taxes, make it easier to hire people. These are really core elements to commerce that unfortunately in emerging markets are often too difficult, which really shut out a large portion of the population from accessing global markets and being able to increase their productivity and increase their standards of living. In five years, we want to be global. We want to be working with dozens of new city developments around the world. We want to be creating new governance systems from scratch. We want to have access to 20, 30 heads of state. We want to be a major player in international development in migration in new cities in the refugee space. We believe charter cities really address fundamental challenges that are facing humanity in the 21st century. Our ultimate goal is to lift tens of millions of people out of poverty. We really need to work really hard and execute effectively. And in five years, I think we'll start seeing some good results.