 Where do you want Africa to be in 50 years and what steps do we need to take to get us there? Agriculture is the largest employer of labor on African continent and also the largest contributor to the GDP. Time is now for us to get agriculture where it should be. We have come together to develop this partnership as an African owned country-led shared agenda to drive transformation in agriculture and in the continent. If you look at what's happening in many growing Africa countries today, the conversation is completely different from the way it was three years ago. We appreciate the group Africa that emphasize so much of the private sector getting involved. Progress in the past year has just been incredible. We've seen more than 90 companies make nearly four billion dollars of investment commitments. Even more important than the actual commitments are the processes that are making that real on the ground. So let's look at how we can combine efforts to configure our source for the long journey. The good thing about growing Africa is most of the things that we are discussing are of commercial interest to the parties involved. So people are going to follow through and actually act on the points that are raised. We want to see them small for the farmers, grow into businesses because they themselves have a vision. I think the partnership and the initiative has achieved one thing, to put the debate on doing things right. For us it is action, action, action. We develop a new model, which is we use mobile phones to develop electronic wallets. Our farmers get electronic coupons for seeds and fertilizers and for mechanization services over their mobile phones. Grow Africa will be the driving force of getting everybody included, the farmers, the women, the youth. I think this event has really moved African agriculture forward. Of course we need to keep the pace up. There's a lot of urgency to getting under way because there is a great sense of the opportunity. But also recognize that it is a really long game too. I believe we now have a caliber of leadership at all levels. They have set the stage for Africa to take off and to be the next frontier of global development.