 Widwch wedi gweld ffordd y griffeniau ac ysgolaf. Mae'n gweithio'r cerddochodraeth yn Ysgolaf. Gymwled y gres o'r gweithio'r fÔlau ddweud y chymdeithasol ond y dweud, ac yn llawer i gael y ddaThysgol Fodol cwsynodau Cjwll yn gweithio cyfnodol o'r ddole wathod o'r publishediau, ond dyna'r gwmhau y mynd i gael y gwasanaeth a'r gweithiau i'r hynodそれfaniadau gwleithau ar gyfer gweithio sy'n gweld, is very important and so CRP6 is really a platform for research over the next ten years looking at these things that brings at least four of the centres together but it will also bring many other research institutions, the private sector and others together around trying to find a basis to push forward the agriculture and forestry into linkages going forward. The programme itself for the next three years is going to have a budget of just over $200 million. This is a substantial new investment in research into the interlinkages between forestry, agroforestry and agriculture. I think that what we've seen in the past is that siloed research has failed to keep pace with the way in which we understand landscapes and so this really marks a breakthrough in the way in which we fund research and hopefully in the way we fund it we will see integrated results and those results will turn into integrated action. So it's an accident of history that we look at landscapes through such a bifurcated policy model, a bifurcated research model. Really that one landscape needs to be managed in a very integrated way. In the World Bank Group we think about this as a triple win. In managing landscape and managing forestry and agriculture together we're really looking for that triple win. The triple win is increased income and increased yield, increased resiliency, the resiliency of farms and of forests and of course if you get both of those right you also can mitigate climate change. So for us the two come together in one landscape and can be managed for that triple win.