 When we think of governance we often only think in terms of government international collaboration but we have to go and move beyond that. We have to think of the whole scope and breadth of non-state actors so you have not only government but also regional governments, local governments and private sector and all kind of organizations that are trying to drive forward action for climate change adaptation. So the challenge would be how to coordinate all that and make sure that there's a leverage factor that enables for more ambition on the ground and action for climate change adaptation. When it comes to the globalized aspect and yes it is true that there is definitely a trend for more globalization but that trend recently may have been put more in jeopardy because of some recent geopolitical context and constraints. Globalization should not mean one-size-fits-all approaches and adaptation in particular is a very good example of the importance of having context specific approaches. So this should be knowledge sharing, this should be regional approaches when the climate context lends itself to this type of knowledge sharing and knowledge sharing is not only about what works it's also about what doesn't work. So you do have more and more initiatives that are looking at the continual approaches I'm taking for example in the African context adaptation in Africa initiative or the triple A initiative that we launched there's all kind of context specific regional initiatives that try to move forward and push more this idea of geographic interlinkages and not simply both focused concerns.