 A large part of it is about quality, and we need to fill those gaps because in general, as a general principle, the more information we have, the more precise the policy decisions we're going to make. And then making the right policy decisions are matters of life and death. The climate crisis is a health crisis, and our climate policy must be informed by the best health data we have so that we can make the best health decisions. We need to be armed with the best evidence. Some of these things will, you know, having the right evidence and having specific evidence for specific regions, detailed evidence will help us make much, much better policy, the kind of policy that will be shaped by evidence and having the wrong evidence could actually send us in the wrong direction. But the other thing is that we need to ensure that everybody's at the table, and everybody is coming with evidence to the table, and that we aren't just allowing all the huge possibilities and benefits and advantages that come with detailed data to be for some parts of the world and not others, so it's a real equality issue.