 WIPO is a very good place to promote the environmental technology transfer. WIPO Green has the database and also the network by which the technology transfer can be facilitated through the expanded network. GIPA has been involved in this project from the beginning and that is because GIPA is one of the largest IP associations in the world and we are IP corporate practitioners and from the user's point of view we believe that there is something we could do to contribute to the green technology transfer. We have been engaged with WIPO for a while now to identify areas for collaboration and synergy between what WIPO does and what the Climate Technology Centre and Network would do. I think WIPO Green has a good opportunity to help countries to improve their innovative capacity to have access to technical assistance, training particularly in the important areas of patent and intellectual property. I think the platform is there to allow both the providers of technology and the seekers of technology to communicate, to understand and know which technologies are available, how countries can have access to them, how countries can deal with the barriers, the enabling environment to allow these companies actually to interact and bring in their know-how and their technologies. I think the platform is promising. WIPO Green is actually a great initiative. It would provide more and deeper understanding on the role of intellectual property rights, how they can be spread, how they can be made available. I would also expect that WIPO Green, while it is providing a platform, a marketplace for interested engineers, scientists, et cetera, and developers, companies, et cetera, that we are getting much more transparency on the availability of technologies and a much more active exchange of technologies between amongst technology providers and technology companies that are interested in technologies. The biggest benefit of WIPO is that WIPO is also involved in the transfer of technology and diffusion of technology, and the CTC and also coordinating the process of transferring and the diffusion of technology in developing countries. WIPO Green is addressing issues related to environmentally sound technologies. That is the green development. Now, when you look at the technology in relation to the CTCN, you find that the CTCN is looking at issues, how to identify and transfer environmentally sound and appropriate technology. So in this case, if CTCN links with WIPO Green, that will be a very good avenue for identifying the appropriate technology and also trying to discuss and resolve the barriers that affect the development and transfer of technology to the developing countries, especially the climate technologies for adaptation and mitigation. There is a collaboration to share databases, also to share good practices, and in addition to that, we also help in terms of identifying where the green technologies could be deployed, especially in the developing countries. The WIPO Green itself is bringing in, especially the green technologies, that we haven't been so much focused and we see it as an opportunity for the redevelopment of green technologies, especially in developing countries where we have the focus as SSKET. But also, we see them as a diffusion of the myths about IP and hopefully that the innovators and the SMEs will be able to have as much information, also they'll be able to utilize the services that will be provided through the WIPO Green platform.