 This paper that came out in science, first authored by Matt Hansen, my former colleague at the University of Maryland, is really a very stunning advance in our ability to monitor forests. So we think back, say, not even 20 years ago. We were mapping global land cover at a resolution of 100 by 100 kilometer grid cell sizes. And now we have the ability to look at forests and changes in forests on an annual time step at a resolution of 30 meters by 30 meters. That is a very impressive advance in our remote sensing capabilities in just a few decades. Well, we know there's been very successful reduction in deforestation in Brazil, which previously was about half of all the deforestation. But that doesn't mean that deforestation isn't rapid in an increasing in other parts of the world. So according to these latest results, if you put that all together tropics wide, we see an increase in deforestation. But that doesn't take away from the impressive success that Brazil has had in reducing its deforestation.