 My name is Claire White. I work for the International Council on Mining and Metals. ICMM is a group of 21 of the largest mining and metals companies in the world, all working on improved performance around sustainable development. I think at the international level we've had a bit of a hiatus following the end of CASM several years ago. I think it's good to reinvigorate discussions at the international level and we've had some fantastic participants in the room with a whole range of expertise, so that's been very valuable. I think some very practical ideas for taking actions forward. I think we know the issues in this space. We've been discussing them for years. There's a number of reports that have been done about them. I think if we can really use this as the basis for in-country action and also continue dialogue at the international level, that would be a good outcome. So I think something that actually hasn't come up too much, but it cuts across a lot of the issues we've been discussing is the need for an intergovernmental forum, a legitimate intergovernmental forum to be convening these types of discussions and taking some of these actions forward. We've discussed the really important role of governments in this space and absent that overarching involvement of governments at the international policy discussion level, I think, will struggle to make changes on the ground. Again, I think just emphasizing that local government piece we've talked about, some of the local capacity constraints of government, I think that's a key area to address. That can be done through some of these in-country dialogues, through donor support, through large-scale mining company support, but I think that piece is key to ensuring everything else works effectively.