 I am with Mr. François Ronsi, Director of the ITU Radio Communication Bureau. Mr. Ronsi, very pleased to have you here in the studio. We are in the middle of the World Radio Communication Conference, which is running in Geneva from the 2nd to the 22nd of November. Why is it so important to have this conference here at this time? Radio communications are playing a key role in your life. They become more and more important as time goes. If you consider that when you use your mobile phone or your smartphone, when you connect to Internet through Wi-Fi, or when you use Bluetooth to listen to music, you are actually using radio communications. When you navigate on GPS to know where your location is, you are using radio communications. When you watch TV or listen to radio in your car, you are receiving the signals through radio communications, satellites or terrestrial broadcasting. When you want to get information on meteorology, the weather forecast, you are actually depending on radio communication to get this information. When you look at Google Earth to see where you are or where you want to go, you are using radio communications because the pictures you are seeing are coming from satellites mostly. Radio communications are playing a key role. All the applications I mentioned are actually using one common resource to work, which is spectrum. If you don't manage spectrum properly, all these applications will interfere with each other and nothing will work. So there is a clear need for regularly meeting between all the countries in the world to ensure that the rules of use of spectrum, which have to be common to all countries in the world, will be updated so that the new trends in using spectrum, which means the new trends in developing radio communication and using them are taken into account. As I mentioned, things are changing very quickly and the role of radio communication in our day-to-day life is getting more and more important. It is also very important for the future, in particular when we speak of monitoring the Earth's resources, climate change and all aspects which are key for sustainable life on the Earth. So what are the key agenda items for the conference at this time? We have here in Geneva for four weeks more than 3,000 delegates coming from virtually every country in the world. This delegate will discuss nearly 40 topics, each of them corresponding to one key issue on using spectrum. One particularly important is additional spectrum for the use of broadband mobile, what we call international mobile telecommunications IMT in the IT. Getting more spectrum for IMT is an important aspect to ensure that the very fast increase in traffic for data on mobile internet is actually taken care of and is possible in the future. Another important issue is to ensure adequate spectrum for what we call global flight tracking, which is ensuring that we know and we can follow where planes are, and this is a follow-up of the Malaysian aircraft disaster last year. There are many other issues like suitable spectrum for drones, for satellites, for Earth exploration, for emergency services. We'll see that all the countries and we are seeing that all the countries present here in Geneva are making their utmost effort to ensure that everybody's interest is taken into account so that at the end of this conference all the countries in the world can sign the new treaty resulting from the decisions of the conference. How will this conference affect the evolution of ICTs? How will it affect our lives? What is very important to support sustainable growth of ICTs in radio communications is to ensure that spectrum will be made available in the long run so that investment can be made with the assurance that they are protected over the next 20 or 30 years. To ensure that you need to do a lot of studies to be sure that there will be no interference between the newcomers in the part of the spectrum which is discussed and the incumbent users which have already made such investments several years ago or are still making such investments. What we are building in the World Radio Conference is a framework to ensure that the future in the next 20 years will permit new developments in radio communications. Mobile communication is one of them but there are many others so that we have a sustainable ecosystem for the coming years. WRCs are taking place every four years so every four years we have the opportunity to adjust to the constantly evolving use of radio communications but this adjustment is made in a very far away and we need to build consensus around the decisions so that they are not challenged a few years later and are constantly ensuring that all radio communications work together without interfering with each other. We look forward to better and more evolved information and communication technologies. Thank you very much Mr. Ronsi. Thank you.