 My name's Bob Carr. I'm the Foreign Minister of Australia. I'm here in Kiribati with the President of this small island country, President Tom. And what I'm looking at here is the living reality of climate change. This is a village. The tide rises and floods it. This did not happen in the past. And sends a message about what might happen to this nation of 100,000 people over six islands, should the temperature continue to warm and the sea levels continue to rise. The implications for the loss of arable land for the cost of proofing the territory against further ocean incursion is very real. The cost of doing something about erosion is very real. The loss of livelihood for fishing folk as a result of ocean acidification is also very real. Here in Kiribati, as Secretary General Banky Moon found out on a recent visit, climate change is the way people live now. And what worries the President and worries his people is what would happen to the fresh water supply of this country if the ocean continues to rise. By some estimates, there's a view that there may only be two decades left. For this people that has occupied this land for perhaps 2,000 years, they call it their home. This is where they fish. This is where they sustain their livelihood. When I met a group of them earlier, the young people burst into songs spontaneously. They have a lively culture, a wonderful culture that is being part of this island group for as long as we know. It could be lost. They could be forced to migrate, to pick up all their possessions from their traditional home and go somewhere else in the world. 100,000 people of Kiribati. There is a huge message here for the rest of us. A message about migration forced by climate change and rising ocean levels. A message about implications for peace and security. Australia asks the leadership of the world at the UN Security Council to think about these messages bearing in mind what the people of Kiribati are living with today. Minister, if I may add to what Minister Pa has just said, I think this is the message we have been trying to communicate with the rest of the international community. I think the fundamental message here is that climate change is not an issue to be addressed into the future. But for the people of this country, we have a community leader here, and he has to contend with the high tides every second week. I think the message that I've always been trying to communicate is, we're not negotiating an issue of an event that might happen in the future. We are dealing with the daily challenges that we have to face. We are according to the predictions. As a nation, our very future and our very survival, particularly the young generation, is very much at stake. You mentioned Secretary General Dr. Moon came here, and he spoke to the community here. There was a young lady who asked the question, Mr. Secretary General, what can you do that would ensure it after you survive? And I think this is the question that we're asking the international community, and I thank Minister Pa for taking this to the UN Security Council because it's a security issue for those countries which are the most vulnerable, and the most vulnerable. And please, give it a thought. We've been talking too much, and I think we need a bit of action. And here we are, witnessing what's been happening, what will continue to get worse. George, do you have anything to say to you? Thank you.