 And now Lagos State's governor, Babadjidis Zawulu, has signed the Lagos State Wealth Fund Bill and the Lagos State Civil Bill, which will be sent to the Lagos State House of Assembly to be passed into law. This is even as the state officially launched a 30-year development plan, which will be implemented between 2022 and 2052. Justin Akadoye tells us more in this business story. It is the closing ceremony of the ninth edition of the Lagos Economic Summit, tagged Agbetti 2022. The 30-year master plan articulates initiatives that will drive Lagos' ambition to become Africa's model mega-city. The day is also auspicious as the governor signs two important bills that enhance the ease of doing business in Lagos and in keeping with the state's mega-city plan. Mr. Governor, please, can we also have a formal picture taken with the Attorney General, the Commissioner for Economic Planning and Budget? Governor Zawulu explains that the Lagos Wealth Fund Bill signals the commencement of the state's sub-suburban Greenbond that will create sustainable wealth for the government and residents. These will also prevent Lagos' revenue from external shock while making the state the Technology and Investment Hub. On the launch of the Lagos' 30-year development plan, the governor says government will continue to pursue policies that are inclusive and equitable to all over the period. In the last two days, what the summit has shown to us is the audacity, which was the words that all the youths that had a privilege to have led and moderated yesterday, what they all said about Lagos, their explanation and their expectations of Lagos. That indeed, Lagos is about the audacity of hope. It's about ensuring that each time you fall, you must get up again. There is a $70 trillion narrow requirements to deliver on the plan to make Lagos a trillion-dollar economy in 30 years. More than 70% of that is expected to come from all the sources than the government's pockets. Part of what we talked about were many low-hanging fruits, including establishing an international finance centre to help address some of these challenges of attracting investment. But the fact that Lagos considers these domestic investors extremely important. The funding for most of the things that are really important in Nigeria sometimes comes from the local financial sector. For example, the funding of the power sector and for us, the funding of our rail lines came from the local banks. For us, we're looking for investment, but we want investment not just from foreign investors but also from local investors. This discussion was really talking about that and getting ideas from different stakeholders. It was quite a gift to have this kind of panel. We had a panel that had economists and established economists that could bring a pragmatic but also academic perspective. You had financiers who can talk about what the private sector needs as well, whether that's from the infrastructure side or just general private sector role. You had the civil servants as well represented by the Special Advisor on SDG and investments, as well as Honourable Yeshao from the Legislature. So we also witnessed a sign-in of a memorandum of understanding between the state government and Deliok Group for Lagos Film City, as well as the MOU year between the state government and the Siemens Energy for Electronics Technician Trading. Justin Acadone, Plastic of these Lagos.