 Okay, thank you Tony and thank you to the panel and I'd really like to thank everyone. It's been a really amazing day today, we've had a really inspiring and informative talk from Avon Majamda and then we had the panel on the challenge and now the panel on resource extraction industries. It's really been a great day and what I wanted to do was actually just summarize some of the take-home messages that we have from today. This is this slide has been compiled by Eric McShane, a student here and has really done a fantastic job of summarizing in one slide what we've heard today and some of the take-home messages. So just to finish off I'd like to just go through some of these. I think that the first one I think is the scale of things. I mean decarbonization is a gigaton scale problem requires a broader way of solutions and across a whole set of deployment of all sorts of technologies and I think actually this is one of the biggest things I got out of Avon's presentation. I always hear about scale and so on and so forth but he really showed it today I think you know when he said that you know to just electrify for example the steel industry it requires a whole new electric grid I mean it really sort of brought home I think the scale of things and then the second point here the novel synthetic and process engineering approaches needed to reduce industrial GHC emissions from the big three and I think this big three is what we're looking at in this meeting actually amongst others in iron and steel chemicals and plastics and cement. So we've heard that. I think the next point here heat the idea about heat generation accounts for a large portion of industrial CO2 emissions requires further R&D and electrified heat and heat replacement technologies. So I think this is going to be a common theme throughout the meeting actually and I think on the last day we'll hear about some other heat technologists how do we get to the very high temperatures how do we get the heat to generate the very high temperatures we need for industrial processes and this was touched on I think today. The next point was important to consider short and long-term solutions based on readiness. We did hear a lot about where are we at on technology readiness levels sometimes we're at the beginning sometimes we're at the end and but you know we might sometimes need to to deploy nascent technologies that will benefit from cost reductions and then we can get learning curves over time so and I think this comes to the next point about collaboration how Stanford can help or how universities can help and I think you know to get the to try and reduce those learning curves and try and get things done as quickly as possible this collaboration between industry and national labs and universities can really help in this innovation and deployment and then it was also you know talked about how we can develop entrepreneurs about this just happened a few minutes ago in the last panel you know discussing about developing entrepreneurs who can create these disruptive green tech companies and how then how they all fit into this innovation innovation change. The last point here was about mining this is a point that was some information that was given by Jill that 11% of the global energy consumption is in the mining industry electricity is the largest component of the energy demand in mining and you know she was saying how we need so much electricity to crush and to and to to get the materials out there's also the processing that's more sometimes on the heat side of things but can we deploy renewable energy to mining sites with storage to match demand. I think there were many other examples during the day of where electrification can make it can have a big impact and I think it's we've had a great first day and actually as I finish off here I would like to say that we've got two more days of this we've got tomorrow we'll be looking at two more sets of industries we're looking at refining and chemicals and then after the break we'll talk about steel the steel and cement industries and then on the the final day we will try and pull everything together actually and look at some of the common themes and potential solutions and then have a session at the end looking at opportunities for academic research so we I think that will probably a couple of minutes early but that's probably all we had to for this what I would what I would just offer again is the opportunity if you any of you want to have sort of private conversations between yourselves we do have this opportunity for networking if you just send a chat to Evan Schwartz he can set up a private breakout room for you if you want to have any sort of you know smaller conversations at the end of today so I think with that I think I'll close the the day and thank again all our speakers our panelists all of you in the audience for participating and we look forward to seeing you tomorrow so with that I'll sign off okay thank you