 As Austin noted, the SDGs require next generation solutions. We couldn't agree more. Our work has taught us that to achieve the global goals is imperative that we advance collaborative interdisciplinary research and action. Prepare a technical workforce that is equipped to engage effectively. Next slide, please. Deliver a systems perspective of the inextricably interlinked challenges. Break down information silos and democratize knowledge. And of course, advocate for the infrastructure and public leadership to drive implementation at scale. At E4C, this is our North Star. For over a decade, we have been dedicated to these issues by leveraging our unique community, digital platform and expertise to enable the global engineering workforce to contribute their expertise and service of the SDGs and beyond. One key pathway is our impact projects, an annual program that brings together our ecosystem of pragmatic optimists with organizations worldwide to advance shared sustainability objectives across three work streams designed for good impact research advancing workflows. E4C's impact projects are co-designed with diverse organizations ranging from academic institutions, nonprofits, social enterprises, private sector and multilateral agencies. To achieve the objectives determined together with our partners, we assemble and cultivate diverse talent around the globe. We lean on the insights and strategic guidance of our global network of more than 1000 multidisciplinary experts. And integrate our E4C fellows whom we expose to urgent issues and train to execute the mix of scholarly work, private sector market research and human science or design required to propel the sector forward. For those of you who are not familiar, the E4C Fellowship Program is our distinctive workforce development program in social innovation. During a six month tenure, fellows benefit from structured online engagement, bespoke training and program support to ensure that they achieve key objectives determined with our partners and gain the valuable self and technical skills required for the contemporary working world. The global pandemic has impacted all aspects of our lives and grounded many development programs. Engineers around the world, particularly early career engineers were working from home and seeking opportunities to contribute their skills for the betterment of humanity. The Digital Native E4C Fellowship Program that we've been running since 2014 provided a vital lifeline to engineers, scientists and architects worldwide. At the height of the pandemic, our program attracted 650 applications from over 80 countries. The 50 fellows that made our 2021 cohort came from 24 countries. To date, we have hosted nearly 150 fellows, 50% of them women from 47 countries in every continent. This approach with the impact projects allows us to simultaneously train exceptional rising professionals worldwide, provide a platform for interdisciplinary cooperation and connect a community of thought leaders and peers from every continent. This human infrastructure is critical to realizing the SDGs and more. In 2021, our distributed workforce of fellows and experts advanced the sustainability goals of over 34 partners in the engineering industry, academia, grassroots nonprofits, and the public sector. Next slide please. Today we've assembled a sample of three impact projects representing cross cutting stakeholders and sustainable development so that they can share their experiences with you.