 management team to the front. And our special guests, who I believe might be, Mija interview was ongoing just a few seconds ago. You're wondering what particular order you would like us in? OK. OK. So welcome again to the groundbreaking ceremony of the Lloyd T. Evans Land Growth Facility. It will be a state-of-the-art building. And will serve as a key international resource and venue for biotechnological research and genetic diversity conservation. To welcome us officially and to welcome all of our special guests, allow me to call on our Deputy Director General for Research, Dr. Matthew Morrell. Thanks very much, Tony. And I'd like to extend a very special welcome to the Honourable Senator, to Ms. Onrado from the Australian Center for International Agricultural Research, and to all of our scientists attending the early Grisp Week. It really is a fabulous pleasure to be able to be here today to mark the groundbreaking for this facility. There are a number of important reasons. The first, from the perspective of a scientist, is that this is going to provide us with a critical facility for enabling us to study in fine detail the interactions of plants with their environment by being able to conduct experiments in extremely controlled environmental conditions. As we face the challenges of climate change, we face the challenge of producing rice for very, very environments around the world. It's critical for us to be able to study those interactions between plants and the specific environmental challenges that they're going to be facing. When we look at the time capsules there, one for 2035 and one for 2060, we can really only begin to predict what the climate will be like, what the rice growing conditions will be like on one hand, so that is a major challenge. On the other hand, what fantastic technologies might be available by that time to be able to make progress when we think back in rice science over the last period since the rice genome was first sequenced just a short time ago now, really. We now have just this year been able to release a sequence of 3,000 rice genomes. So this facility will be very important to help us unlock the information that those genomes encode. We may, of course, be just taking a mobile phone and holding it up against the plant and getting the DNA sequenced by that time. Who knows? You would have laughed 10 years ago if you said we'd had 3,000 genomes. The connection with Australia is strong. Lloyd Evans was a pioneer in developing phytotron facilities. Of course, he was much more well-known for his work in plant science generally. He played a very important role in Australia. He was a chief of the division of the plant industry at CSRO. And there is a strong and enduring connection between Erie and Australia that makes this a very appropriate relationship to continue through this building. And we have many strong connections with the groups that Lloyd was involved in, in our C4 rice project, in phytotron projects, in a whole range of genetic analysis projects that are ongoing. And for me, it's a particular pleasure, of course, being an Australian, seeing my taxpayers' dollars turn up here is fantastic, and to continue that connection. So welcome to all of you again. This facility is going to make a big difference. I think, Bob, we would say that this is the first of a number of facilities we'd like to see enhance our capacity to meet the challenges of rice, population growth, climate change. And again, to go back to Lloyd, he wrote very persuasively and made a big impact with some of his writings about the challenge. And I think we were discussing at the Erie Griswit that we cannot become complacent about meeting the challenges of the future. And I think that, again, brings us back to a strong connection there. So again, welcome to our guests, and thank you very much.