 The TPP began really through activities during 2019, such as the HLP report, the CIRAD CGAIR programme on agroecology and the Global Commission on Adaptation report on agroecology contributing to resilience of agriculture. And we look at this slide from the centre outwards because the activity of the TPP is in the various landscapes, farms, the places where agroecology is happening, and then the global research and advocacy system supports that work on the ground. Next slide. So, very simply, what the TPP is all about is addressing knowledge and implementation gaps that constrain the wide scale uptake of agroecological transitions. Next slide. And those three words are important. The idea is to be transformative, not just to do research, but to make sure that things actually change on the ground. It's a partnership. And that's really important because lots of people are working on agroecology. If we work together, then we're likely to make faster progress than if we're operating separately. And so a platform is what makes this all possible. And it uses this pattern Osterprisal of working bottom up and top down at the same time to see what's feasible with farmers on the ground and food system, other food system actors, and to create the enabling environment and remove lock ins that constrain adoption. Next slide. So the governance of the TPP is threefold. There are three donor countries at the moment, that's France, Switzerland, and the European Union. There are three research providers. That's C foricraft the French research institutions and CGR. There is then three civil society farmer organizations, the Alliance for Food, Sovereignty in Africa, the Asian Farmers Association and the Latin American representative of the Indigenous Partnership. Next slide. Supporting the work in an advisory role is an advisory group, which currently consists of people mainly from UN organizations from UNEP, FAO, IFAD, but also Biovision and TMG. Next slide. Through 2020 and 2021 up to September, where the coalition for transforming food systems through agroecology came into being. There was a huge amount of activity in getting projects and modes of working together on the table, and it was very successful with nearly 150 million worth of project funding around key gaps that have been identified by this collective that is the TPP. And these are projects which are practical, focused and with partners on the ground in different countries. Next. So at UNFSS, at the last moment really, the group of friends of agroecology, which are countries, member countries of FAO, made a strong letter to the UN suggesting that agroecology should be on the radar of UNFSS. In the pre-summit, an agroecology session was set up after lunchtime, it was one of the best attended sessions of the summit, and it led to the development with the support of the transformative partnership platform of the coalition. Next slide. And the important thing about the coalition is it's a coalition of the willing. And a lot of you may have noticed that the recommendations in the HLP report got quite watered down from the original when it came to the policy convergence process. So we're hoping by those countries that get together and there's nearly 40 that have already joined, including the European Union, the African Union and ECOWAS, and over 60 organizations. So it's already a coalition of 100 that by having some common ground will be able to make faster progress on action. And that's what we're interested as far as the coalition is concerned is making action on the ground. Next slide. And there are five working groups. And the one that the TPP is most closely associated with is the research and innovation working group, which of course itself then interacts with the others. Next slide. Of course, the TPP operates on the basis of the 13 HLP principles is setting out what agroecology is all about, but it doesn't just follow the classic Gleesman transition, because next slide. We realize that there are multiple transitions, click again, that start from different places and follow different trajectories according to context, click again. And once we bring the consumers as well as the producers into the picture, then agency of people throughout the food system to have really democratic food systems becomes a really significant element. Next slide. There are eight working domains that have been identified for immediate progress within the TPP, and you'll hear more about what's going on in some of those from Lisa later on. With that, I hope that you've got, you probably all already knew most of that, but that's what the TPP, how the TPP came about, and what its key focus is.