 Ladies and gentlemen to this session on critical raw materials. But before I reduce the speakers and the subject, let me just mention one incredible experience which I had this morning. I used the time very early in the morning to go to a place, 10 minutes from here, the Abrahamic family house. I was not familiar that this exists, but a friend of mine had told me about it. It's a church, a synagogue and a mosque, all on one compound. And it is a strong sign of tolerance that the United Arab Emirates send with this wonderful architecture, which is not just a museum, but where people pray, people sing, people have masses, services. It was deeply moving and especially in these times, I can only encourage you to use the time to go there and see it and one can only wish that this message that the Emirates send with this wonderful institution will be heard in all major Abrahamic religions. Well, we have a very important subject and that is critical raw materials. And last year, after the Russian invasion in Ukraine, we woke up and I say it as a German, also we and especially we woke up and immediately recognized how much dependent we were on, in this case, Russian gas. And at that time, at the last World Policy Conference, the 15th edition, we already had a panel on critical raw materials with a representative from the EU Commission. And we all stated, well, the dependency on critical raw materials, on some critical raw materials on China, for instance, are even higher than those dependencies that we had with Russian gas. And we urged the Commission and urged the policymakers, do something to diversify, do something to start mining again in Europe, look for other places. And the question that we asked today and which is the lead question here for the panel is what has changed during last year? Was this strong demand heard by policymakers in Brussels and Washington and the Gulf elsewhere in the world not to rely on one or two countries alone but to diversify?