 Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you so much for joining us for today's AUKUS Defense Minister's Joint Press Meeting. The ministers and I also reviewed our major accomplishments within the crucial second pillar of AUKUS. And through pillar two, we have leveraged our respective defense innovation and industry sectors to develop and deliver advanced capabilities so that our warfighters can hear, see, and act with decisive advantage. We're innovating with cutting-edge tech in several areas, including artificial intelligence, electronic warfare, and quantum technology. And by implementing strong standards of technology protection, we are reducing barriers to sharing information and technology. And we're streamlining our processes to deliver these capabilities and lead our partnership forward for the next generation. I think today's meeting will be regarded as a critical moment in the history of pillar two of AUKUS and that is the sharing and development of advanced technologies between our three countries. We're putting in place the architecture which will enable that to happen through the international joint requirement oversight council, which will give a joint capacity to look at the technologies with which we are pursuing. Our armaments directors will be working together with the tabletop exercise next year. And as Lloyd mentioned, our innovation organisations, the Defense Innovation Unit of both the United States and the United Kingdom, along with the Australian Strategic Capabilities Accelerator, are working together on joint challenges, which we'll see initially that happen in the space of electronic warfare. Having strike capabilities are really important. And when you look at something like resilient precision targeting, which was part of the announcements today, that is critically important. When you look at the maritime autonomy measures that are contained in the announcements today, that's hugely beneficial for a country like Australia. I think the third area which is covered by the specific technologies which have been described in the announcements is decision advantage. Decision advantage in terms of the time it takes to make a decision in the battle space, but also the fidelity with which the fidelity of information that is there for the decision maker, that's obviously critically important to any defence forces it is to ours. So when we look at the technologies that we are working on as three countries, they are highly relevant to the specific needs of the Australian Defence Force. Today, in a much more dangerous world, with Russia waging war in Ukraine, with Hamas reaching Havok in the Middle East, China undermining the freedom of navigation in the Indo-Pacific, we've never had a greater need for more innovation to be more pioneering. Which is why over the past few years, AUKUS has been fusing together our transnational brain power. And here at the Defence Innovation Unit, we've discussed the results, a raft of game changing new AUKUS projects. Together our nations will be launching and recovering undersea vehicles from torpedo tubes on current submarines. We'll be enabling us to deliver more sophisticated strike intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance. We'll be using quantum technologies, just mentioned, to support global positioning, enhancing the ability of our undersea capabilities, including on our future SSN AUKUS submarines, so that they can stay silent and undetected. Gentlemen, thank you so much. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes our press briefing for today. Thank you again for joining us.