 Today is Saturday the 11th of November, and it's the middle weekend of the two-week-long COP, and we are doing our two-day development and climate days event that IID has been running now. It's the 17th year. I didn't realise it's been 17 years since we started doing this. We have several hundred people, lots of fun and games and discussions and plenary and parallel sessions. This event is designed as a place for people who work on climate change, particularly on adaptation to climate change, to meet with each other, learn from each other, share. It's not a negotiating space. In fact, we don't get that many negotiators even though we invite them. They're usually busy with the negotiations, even on weekends. But we nevertheless had a very, very lively set of sessions, particularly looking at delivering adaptation to the most vulnerable communities, and in particular delivering finance to them, which is not really reaching them, although adaptation finance seems to be flowing from the global to the national. It is not flowing any further down to the most vulnerable communities yet. We have a few small, good examples. We hope we can build on those. And we've come up with lots of very good ideas of how we feel that can be better done. And we hope to place that to the negotiators next week when they have another week of negotiating to finish up what we hope will be a good result in COP23, which is about increasing the level of financing and in particular starting some financing for loss and damage, because that's already happening. So we're going to have to deal with that. We have another day of development climate days tomorrow Sunday, which we hope will also be quite interesting, and I'll report back on that tomorrow evening.