 The understanding that water problems cannot be solved with technology or with money, but they must be solved with the participation of old stakeholders and set different instruments that can be strategic, that can be institutional, governance, legal, they can be for sure technological, social, and all together with all those different approaches we can achieve those very important goals. Water is precious, nobody can make water, so we have to use water efficiently. Argentina has now a plan that has been developed at the beginning of our government. It's a plan that has a main focus to develop the water as a key resource for improving the quality of living of our people and also as a key resource, as a driver for sustainable development. Main message, advance the new normal now. Water utilities need to think 30 years, 50 years, 100 years in advance when planning their financial model. Public-private partnerships is a situation, is a contractual arrangement between a government entity and a private corporation or company where they co-leverage their strengths to achieve a common goal. So in the case of the water sector, the common goal could be increasing and expanding connection within a particular city or metropolitan area. The contribution of the private sector is not always, in a lot of cases, financing and technical expertise whereas the government's role is in reducing the risks for entry of the private sector so legislation, stakeholder engagement and the like. Because I'm a professional working in wastewater recycling in Ghana so seeing the expertise from across the world in terms of wastewater recycling is a very big opportunity for me to learn what is happening in Latin America, what is happening in Europe at the same time so it has provided a one-stop shop to learn from all over the world.