 Today is the 21st of September, Sunday, and I'm in New York in the evening. I've just had a very exhausting five hours of marching all across New York City with tens of thousands, perhaps over 100,000 people from all over the world, all walks of life, young, old, all kinds of people with banners and costumes and many different kinds of placards. And I was fortunate to have a number of colleagues, alumni from the International Center for Climate Change and Development here with us, so we had a banner on ICAD and marched with that together with everybody else as part of the Bangladesh Environment Network, which is also part of the larger South Asian diaspora groups. So all the South Asians were together at the front of the march and we marched all the way from the beginning to the end. It was exhausting, but exhilarating as well. We hope that this march will get a lot of media attention, will get people talking about climate change, wanting to do something about climate change, and most importantly will resonate with the leaders who are going to arrive here in New York tomorrow and who will be speaking at the UN summit called by the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday. We understand well over 100 heads of state are coming, including the Prime Minister Bangladesh. We expect President Obama to be there as well. And we hope that they will all be giving us positive messages on what they are already doing, what they are prepared to do, and hopefully that positive message will then flow into the UN Framework Convention negotiations coming up in Lima this December and leading to a new deal or a new agreement in Paris a year from then. So we are very hopeful. Today was a great march. A lot of energy. We hope that energy goes into the leaders and that the leaders are willing to take the kind of action that is needed because we don't have any more time to lose.