 colleagues, good afternoon also from my side. It is a great honour to be with you at the opening of this panel here. UNUEHS, the Institute for Environment and Human Security, is not a law institute. The way we come to our project is with mandates to investigate the linkage between the climate stressors on the global side and the way people adapt on the community level and on the household level by their decision to establish this linkage. With respect to risk management measures, with respect to mitigation and so on. I think we have, during the last years, recently, together with care in large series of case studies and also with CDKN, globally distributed case studies, been able to kind of glue together different narratives into a kind of a common view to look at these processes. We have also been able to supply important information to inform policy processes with UNFCCC, the Cancun Adaptation Framework, the current discourse on loss and damage. The details of the stories in the different parts of the world, the different circumstances, are of course different. But there are a few important common stories which I think are very, very important to recognise. First of all, we mostly start from the question, what does climate do? When you go to local situations, you almost invariably see that while climate is an important stress, it's many other further push and pull factor that have to be taken into account. So this is a very important thing we should always have in mind. The second thing which we see, and I come to an end already, although we did not do detailed investigations yet, but you see it again and again that the legal situation, the legal frameworks people are finding themselves in are just explicitly or implicitly taking a large share in the influences and the way they take the decision. And I think it is important to note it is not just the push factors, the aspects of protection that are very important, but also the pull factors, the assets people have and the way the people have access to these different economic assets which are a very important part and I think deserve to have a close inspection in future. And I'm extremely happy that we are able to gather with the Marie Robinson Foundation to do hopefully a very important step in this direction. So I wish us all a very fruitful afternoon and hopefully also not just important, but also enjoyable discussion this afternoon. Thank you very much for attending this meeting.