 It's an ATP-3 sponsored workshop designed to engage industry leaders who are interested in knowing how to find, grow, harvest, and process algae for a variety of biomass-based products. By bringing people together from across the country and internationally, we've provided both formal and informal opportunities for the individuals to network. One has the underlying goal of advancing the algae industry. ATP-3 is a project sponsored by the Department of Energy to provide high-quality test bed facilities in multiple locations around the United States for research and algae technology, research that can be done by universities, by industrial partners, by national labs. The Arizona Center for Agile Technology and Innovation offers all activities across the algae value chain from collection and isolation of microalgae, biomass production on a large scale, downstream processing, which includes dewatering and harvesting, as well as drying and producing products of interest. ATP-3 has the resources from the standpoint of laboratory facilities and outdoor facilities to grow algae at different scales and for different products. I'm here for, I guess, the inaugural ATP-3 workshop and I'm here to understand how algae is really produced from beginning to end. For the microalgae work to be applied in a biofuel industry, you really need mass-scaled production and we really did not have that much of experience on the scaling up processes. A very unique feature of the ATP-3 training program is that we have the ability to draw together a faculty who can provide outstanding materials in a classroom setting, but equally if not more important, can then take people into the laboratory and go through step-by-step procedures that are needed for isolating an algae species or for cultivating it under optimum conditions. When you actually start doing it for yourself, you get a better appreciation of what the complexities are like. People cannot really get easy access to large-scale operation because there's a lot of IP involved which I understand totally and ATP-3 being that public-private cooperation is actually great for us to see some of the facilities. Their hands are getting green because they're working with these organisms from laboratory to field scale. A lot of times you go to a conference or a workshop and you end up spending 90% of your time in the same room and that hasn't happened here, so that's been terrific. What drives us really excited about this business, you can, you know, chat with people in this informal setting. I think that was the best thing that I loved. It's great to help fledgling companies get off of the ground, improve programs at other universities across the country and in fact internationally, so it's always exciting. ATP-3 education and training workshops are going to expand in a variety of ways. We're going to take some of the specific areas and provide more detail training. We will be hosting programs here at Arizona State University, at the University of Texas, Solana in Hawaii, among other of our locations and I encourage you to visit our website at ATP-3.org where you can find out all the information about our training programs and many of the other services that we offer. The vision is for us to be a real contributor to the future of algae in the United States and more importantly globally.