 Kia ora whanau! How is everyone today? Great. I just want to take a moment if you could just please get composed, just take a moment. I want to just think of all the people that departed, the people that are not here today. It might be a relative, a close friend, a parent or several. So just moment of silence, please. Okay, thank you. I'm from Geneva. My name is James, and my lake is like Le Mans, my mountain is Mont Blanc. This is my team. So that's my wife Sylvie and my son Maui. Maui is two. Unfortunately they're not here today, but I'm sure they will be here. So I'm going to take a moment if you could just please get composed. Unfortunately they're not here today, but I'm sure they will be here soon, and we will be soon here together. I also have another new name. It's Keriru. So with Pipiana and Tamaha we decided that. And this is what I do. How did I come about launching Manaya? Just a few important texts to remember. I would like everyone to take a deep breath and exhale. And take another one. And exhale. Okay, one out of those two breaths came from the ocean. Just try and remember that every day. Just a few facts just to aggravate that. 90% of the world's fish stocks are gone. 1.5 billion people depend on fish for their livelihoods. The ocean absorbs CO2 from climate change and still 60% of the heat around the world. We know nothing about the ocean. We explored 5% of it. And we roughly estimate that 200,000 species were discovered, but actually there's 2 million out there. So that's just 10%. Just another fact. Also, 7.44% of the world's oceans are protected. Actually fully protected is probably around 2%. You can notice on this slide the high seas are largely unprotected. So there's a lot of work to be done there. So I came about doing this from diving on the Great Barrow Reef as a dive master and guide. And I wanted to take people diving and I did. And then I realized that I could do more. So my story then took me back. This is one of the reasons why things are going bad is coral bleaching, which destroys coral reefs. So I went back to Geneva and I started talking to organizations there. I found that a lot of the things that they communicate, their science, their policy work is ineffective. So I resolved to work with some of these organizations. These are our clients to communicate more effectively using video and films and conferences and events where we communicate science and the policy. So we translate scientific reports. We condense them. We use the knowledge from protected area managers. We work with program managers, conservationists to communicate that. We go on expeditions. This is the sort of things that we do. We take reports, we go and screen them at conferences and we go on expeditions. We accompany scientists in their work. This was in the Indian Ocean last year making a film about high seas, which then was taken to the UN. This is a new film we just completed in Marquisas defending a marine protected area project there. With the local communities and also recently the global standard for our UCN, which is basically what governments need to do to make marine protected areas more effective. Recently I was in a submarine discovering deep reefs because they also have perhaps some solutions to save the shallow reefs. And some exciting things coming up I think and why New Zealand is I think there's a global conversation taking place, for example around the ocean literacy framework and also around the upcoming United Nations decade for ocean science. I think New Zealand should take part in these global conversations and can become a leader in marine conservation. So personally I believe I came in nine years ago and I never really left. Everything that I've done has been connected to my experience here working with Greenpeace, going up to Matauri Bay on the Rainbow Warrior resting site. And I feel that this spirit, as some others have pointed out, this spirit of Katia Kitanga, is the key to solving the world's problems and to saving the ocean. And UCN is already working on this and I was there when Indigenous peoples came at the last Marine Protected Area Congress and they were the people on stage that were the most acclaimed and I think it's a good sign. So what we're doing here goes in that direction and I want to be part of that journey with you so please get in touch. Thank you.