 Hello everybody. I would welcome everybody to this breakout session in which we are going to award the diploma. I would appreciate if all the students will turn on their cameras. Welcome, Jack. Welcome everybody. We are still waiting for some of the VIPs of this session to join. And let me again repeat, dear students, when you are having entered and when you can hear me, of course, and if you are able to, please switch on your cameras so that we all can see you. This session is about you and it will be really nice if we can all see your faces. So good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, to this online graduation ceremony for the Environmental Science Embassy. I'm going to ask everybody before we are going to continue to turn off your microphones in order that we do not have the best sound quality available. But I would like to ask the students, the graduates to turn on their cameras so that we can see them. So if you can do that in the meantime, then I continue to what we are going to do in this session to talk you through the program. First, I will start inviting Erik Der Reuter, who was the program coordinator for this Environmental Science batch of 2018-2020, to say a nice words of welcome to our graduates. Afterwards, we will share a short video to show some experiences of our program of the last 18 months. Then we will continue with handing over virtually our diplomas. This will be done by our program chair, Professor Ken Irvine. And if after that, Professor Ken Irvine, I'm going to ask him to say some nice words of congratulations, a nodation to our newly graduates. And if still time is available, I will ask some of the specialization coordinators if they might also be able to give some nice words of congratulations to the student participants. I see that none of the students are yet able to switch on the video. I'm going to re-ask if you are able to do it, although I see messages that people cannot turn on the videos. That's a little bit of pity. Then I'm going to ask Erik Der Reuter, program coordinator for the Environmental Science MSC, up to this year to turn on his microphone, hopefully also his camera, and to give some nice words of introduction and welcome to our graduates. Thank you very much, Erik, for these nice words. I see also that some students are getting their video on, so maybe give it another try. In the meantime, as Erik has already shared with us, is that we have lots of good memories. And these memories are also presented in a video which I'm going to share with you now. Please mute your microphones. So those were very nice memories. May I ask again to mute your microphones, otherwise I'm going to also mute them maybe for you, because we're still getting back noise in. May I invite Professor Ken Irvine to take over, because now we are going to move forward to our diploma handing over ceremony. So Professor Irvine, can you turn on your microphone and hopefully also your camera? Yes, I can. So at the end of our memories video, we already saw most of the graduates, and now of course we would like to one by one congratulate you guys all because in the end this is a very much also your, your day today. So Professor Ken Irvine. We can hear you clearly, Ken. That's appropriate. Thank you. Yes, you need to make it very short though, because in two minutes we go back to the main session I see. Thank you very much, Professor Ken Irvine. As indeed there is, we need to go back to the the plenary session. I would like to thank everybody who is in here and I see that there is also a lot of colleagues teaching staff from IAC who are also the have been the source of your thesis projects. Let me say thank you that you are here, and that you are supporting the students mentally, morally, and also in virtual person. Thank you all very much, dear students. I think they say may the worst day of your past be the best day of your future. No, they didn't say may the best day of your past be the worst day of your future. So I wish you all the luck, very best, and I hope to see you also in the near future. Thank you very much. And I give you an applause. So let's return to the plenary.