 Good morning everyone. We've given out some maps today which you can take away with you. We're going to be doing daily measurement of maps of our progress. The main issue we've got is we've still got extensive fire on the northern batters and also on the southern batter out towards the Hazelwood power station. And in that we're concentrating on the northern batter to minimise the smoke in the ash especially for more. We're doing that a number of ways. We've got fire services and specialists from all across Australia pretty well from CFA, MFB, the aviation fire services, ACT fire services and also Tasmania because what we're using as a strategy is to use compressed air foam to suppress the ash and the smoke as best we can from the northern batters. And then after that we secure it with our large aerial appliances which can put water into the coal seam if you like. Our main issue is that a lot of this is weather driven. So we've got a Tuesday afternoon when we had strong northerlies and then the southwesterly change and had the grass fire run out towards Hazelwood power station. It takes our focus off the batters and also takes the batters with the wind actually extend. So it's a bit of a frustrating thing for us at the moment where we contain something and then a couple of days later the wind takes it to a direction we don't want to go and then we come back to contain it again. So we need good weather and we need good resources to put this out. We've been working closely with the mine and the mine have put a reticulated water system on the batters for us and we've got some spray systems working on the northern batter. You'll see hopefully in the next couple of days some of that red and orange on our maps go to green. And as we do that again smoke lessons and also the fire threat. The balancing act for us is we've got the safety of our firefighters with carbon and oxide in the mine itself. So we have two hour rotations with them and also we monitor their health in the mine. Yesterday we had numerous hours out of the mine because the weather conditions we just couldn't operate. So we get behind the APOR because we can't actually fight the fire. Secondly we make sure we can minimise the smoke for more and the La Trove Valley and that's been our main target if you like. And then we've also got some other issues in the mine itself. We're balancing water issues because we're putting a lot of water into the mine and we're not taking a lot of water out and so we actually have to put a lot of water out of the mine in the next few days to give us that balance effect. If you have more water in the mine actually the integrity of the mine and some of the infrastructure in the mine becomes fragile. So that's a balancing act we've got as well. And of course lastly it's about for us is the weather. We've got some strong easterly winds tomorrow which will take the smoke away from all but it'll put pressure on the west end of our northern batter so we're working hard on that today. And then next Tuesday and next Friday is going to be some high wind days. Tuesday is going to be like last Tuesday strong northerly with the south west change and then hot and windy on next Friday which again we know that's coming and we put strategies in place to fix it. But the main thing is we're trying our best to put the fire out as fire services across the nation pretty well working closely with the mine and I know it's frustrating but it's a big job and if you look at the maps how large it is and we're taking it one piece at a time until we finish. Thank you.