 Distinguished guests and participants, welcome to my presentation. My name is Moshumi Parbin. I work for PCM project. The project is implemented by Planning Commission Bangladesh and supported by UNDP and UNEP. The concept I'm discussing now is many streamlining climate change into development planning. It's a concept developed by a group of people, Simon mentioned earlier. The presentation will be focusing more on how it is integrating into climate change, into climate change many streamlining process. So the presentation, the framework or the paper will give you the planner's option for think strategically and think systematically. How can they address climate resilient into development planning? So the content of my presentation will be focusing more on government perspective, basically how the paper is being developed, its methodology and of course the concept many streamlining and the framework and the emerging trends. So now let me say about something, the methodological part. As Simon said earlier, it's a framework that is developed by a group of people, mainly the government group from Asia, South Asia and Africa. They actually developed the paper based on their experiential learning, based on their knowledge and existing practices. So the paper is being prepared through mostly reflection, experience sharing and review of extensive amount of literatures. Of course it has an opportunity to consult with the other stakeholders outside government like last COP and like this CVS-7. So of course we'll ask your comments on the paper. So now let me explain what is many streamlining, what does it mean really. So it refers to an approach. The approach is not so much generic approaches, it is very much strategic approaches and it's country-driven and the country's own domestic priorities is the key heart of the concept. So it's emphasized more on the cross-sectoral integration of climate change issues and how it will be integrated into the development planning process for climate resilient development. So to implement the concept or to materialize the concept, a framework we have developed that will help to assess and plan, that will help to assess and plan for the planners to identify options, to identify activities, to identify their conditions and positions like that. And it has three building blocks. And again it is pertinent to be mentioned here that the building block is also developed by the same process I mentioned earlier, that is reflection, experience sharing and knowledge sharing. The three key building blocks are enabling environment, policy and planning and program and projects. So let me tell about the enabling environment. The enabling environment refers to a system or a process that will help us, the planners, to integrate climate change issues in their planning process. So it has two sub-components, that is political will and information process. So political will is very much important to create an enabling environment and the political will refers to politicians, the governments, the technocrats and other stakeholders, donors, communities. The second building block is policy and planning. Of course without integrating the issues into policy and planning it is very difficult to work on it. So political will has three sub-component, that is policy, institutions and budgetary instrument. And the budgetary instrument is very important for many streamlining climate change. Without it, it is quite difficult to address it. And of course there are some projects and programs. So it is not, the three building blocks is not one after another. It can be mutually reflected in the planning process. So this is the three key building blocks we are proposing from the group. So I said earlier the building blocks will help to assess and identify priorities, domestic priorities and need and their actions. So we have said some questions, that is the political will, is the government or the is the country has the political will to many streamlining climate change issues and information services is available there and policy response is there or not, institutional instruments are there or not. So there are some basic assessment questions that will help to assess the country's positions and their existing level of mainstreamlining climate change issues. So it's something that it will create a baseline. So based on the baseline we can move forward. So we are few countries are here to develop the concept. So there are some emerging trends or some good practices we have identified. So on the left hand side you already know that there are some case, four cases we have prepared so you can have a look on it. I can say few examples like in case of political will is the government's political will. So we have identified that for example Bangladesh has a good political will to many streamlining climate change issues because we have BCCSAP, we have NAPA, we have financial mechanism in Bangladesh, so it is there. And information services we can take example from Kenya, they have good information services, they have T21 model. The T21 model will help the planners to assess their economic opportunities and it will help to coordinate among the ministries. It will help to identify priorities among the ministries. So the examples are there. And policy framework we can take example of Gambia that we figure it out. Institutional arrangement we can take example from Kenya and Bangladesh. There are some other countries it is in it is being practices but Kenya and Bangladesh is moving first on institutional arrangement. And for the case of Bangladesh we have some institutional arrangement that is you already know that we have two financing mechanism in Bangladesh that is Bangladesh climate resilient fund and Bangladesh climate trust fund. So both the funds are operating in Bangladesh under minister of environment. And the financial framework is Rwanda, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Laos, the four countries are moving ahead for financial framework. So at the end we can say that the each block that is enabling environment policy and project program we have figured out that each block indicates that the countries are increasingly many streaming lining climate change resilience into their development planning. And countries are moving ahead with the three building blocks. So this is very brief description about our work. So if you have any questions please ask we can discuss it more detail. Thank you.