 Friendship, a social purpose organization, has started in Bangladesh in 2002 by Runa Khan, founder and executive director. Our working area, 100% climate impacted. It has been revealed through disaster risk reduction projects that people gain knowledge, skills, capacity to face adversity of disaster because they trained on and equipped with different measures. It has been identified a great step between relief and rehabilitation phase and development pathway. Community consultation and friendship experiences, three areas have been identified. Number one, no capital. People need capital to start business or economic activities, agricultural activities. The normal microfinance program, sometimes not suitable for them to balance the repayment and profit. Number two, no knowledge about the ecosystem around them. People sometimes, you know, not aware what the benefits for them exist with the government mechanism and how to get access to the social safety net coverage. Number three, no access to the market. Because of geographic obstacles, barrier, they can't be in market. Through participatory process, we identified three major area to address. One to gain capital. Friendship identified community-specific, family-specific, quick economic opportunities and that help people within their community, within their household level to make some capital. We helping people to learn how to get access to legal services, to the government assistance, social safety net coverage. And number three, we draw property map, which is community, how facing difficulties for geographic barriers to be in the market. And that poverty mapping, helping people to address with the support from local government to be in the market so people can sell their products as they wish. We help people to learn modern agricultural technology, green technology. And we help people to learn, you know, seasonal variation for different crops and vegetables fruits. We help people to cultivate your own saline-tolerant or flour-tolerant crops. We help people to manage crop calendar and at the same time, they maintain now the income and investment so that they can realize what to do, what not to do. It is amazing, within two years time, 67% income increased of targeted families, 97% of families using, you know, saline-tolerant and flour-tolerant crops. And around 98% of families, they maintain crop calendar, 99% they use natural manure and around 98% they maintain, you know, the income and expenditure records. The poor areas are not poor because of people live there. Poverty also a geographical problem. And they are poor because they have limited options for economic opportunities. They are poor because they are less infrastructural facilities. They are poor because they don't have access to market. If the platform for taking off not provided after disaster relief intervention, these people will not able to move forward and to be part of the development economy. We have proved this is an effective solution. And people from dependent on relief, then to develop and mainstream. We need to build a bridge to transition fund. In other words, climate action resilient fund. And we continue application and advocacy with the government and developing partners to take it forward. And that can be a better solution for the people in need across the world. Let's work together for transition fund. Thank you so much.