 I'm on a boat, one kilometer off the coast of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station, which you can see behind me, 12 meters below us, a tunnel, specially constructed, will be the one used for the control discharge of the Alps' treated water. Yesterday in Tokyo, I gave Prime Minister Shira a comprehensive report, which after two years of evaluation and assessment of Japan's basic policy with this water contains our findings. The IEA has determined that the plan is consistent with the international safety standards. The water, once treated, will be stripped of almost all the radionuclides that it contains after contact with the stricken reactors, with the exception of Tridium, which is present in nature and in the water, but which through this method will be diluted well below the agreed levels by the WHO. Our teams are going to stay here. Our work is not over. Assessing a plan is one thing, but staying, reviewing continuously until the last drop of the accumulated water is safely discharged is our mission to make sure that no harm will come out of this operation. The IEA, as we said from the very beginning, has been present, is present, and will be present until the end of this process.