 Good afternoon everyone and thank you for inviting me to the Woodstock of Clean Energy. I don't think I've ever been to a conference with the diversity of clean energy and sustainability activities and companies that I see here today. I want to be very brief because I know that you guys have a lot of very important networking to do. Unfortunately there's no alcohol so I can speak a little bit longer than if it were later in the day. But really I want to just emphasize a couple things. I think the first thing which I think as Scott mentioned in his clearest day to me is that clean energy is ready for launch. After more than three decades of incredibly hard work funding America's best innovators, best entrepreneurs, most forward-leading financiers tapping into the truly American ethos of entrepreneurship and innovation, we're now at a point where a wide variety of the clean energy technologies that we've all been working on for a long time are ready for launch. And I just want to talk about a few examples. But what that really puts us in my opinion is that it's no longer a question for me of whether we're going to get there. It's are we going to get there in time and are we going to get there in a way where we're going to harvest the fruit of the trillion dollar economic opportunity that is before us. As Scott mentioned more than 260 billion dollars invested last year in the clean energy sector. And in the next five to ten years, panoply of clean energy technologies are going to go from almost cost competitive to directly cost competitive without subsidies. And that's when we get into the trillions. And so it's really a stark choice that we have to make. Do we want to step up, make the appropriate investments here in the last five yards towards the end zone and make sure that we derive the economic benefit of the transition to a clean energy economy? Are we going to walk away and see global leadership to other nations like China, India, South Korea and Germany that are going big to try to get this? And so just to give you a few examples of amazing accomplishments we've had. We've seen tremendous gains in fuel economy over the last few decades. The investments that E-Are has made over the last 30 years, about a billion dollars into cutting edge combustion R&D have resulted in 70 billion dollars of net benefit both economically and environmentally. That's a 70 to 1 ratio. In electric vehicles, we went from these things being a curiosity some time ago to now, we're seeing them be almost directly cost competitive. Over the last four years, together we've produced the cost of batteries by 50%. And an innovation just made last year with a start-up in Argonne National Labs by ARPA-E and EDRE together holds promise to drop the cost by another 40%. And at that point, electric vehicles will become directly cost competitive with the standard gasoline vehicles we're driving today. So it's in our sights. We've seen a tripling of electric vehicle sales in the last year up to 50,000. This next year we're going to see 15 new plug-in hybrid models, plug-in hybrid electric vehicle models on the market. And so we're seeing revolutionary change in electric vehicles and that's coming down the pipe. In renewable power, as Scott mentioned, we've made tremendous strides. We've seen a doubling of renewable power on the grid from wind and geothermal and solar over the last four years. The president has laid the goal up for another doubling by 2020. Last year there was more wind power added to the grid than any other source of electricity. Over the last seven years, we've doubled the amount of domestic content in all of the wind farms in the United States. So we've made tremendous progress there. We've also made revolutionary progress in solar. With Scott being a real pioneer in the field over the last 30-plus years, this was a fact that I read in the Wall Street Journal of Bell Places, more than 99% reduction in the cost of solar, more than 80% reduction in the cost of solar modules the last four years. And I just saw that in Arizona there's a PPA for a utility-scale solar project at less than 6 cents per kilowatt hour. So solar is almost here. And we've seen similar gains in efficiency. Our appliance standards program has allowed customers like yourself to save billions of dollars every year on energy costs, simultaneously making sure that we're all buying high-quality, high-efficiency appliances that actually advantages high-quality producers in the United States. And one last thing I'll mention on the efficiency side is LEDs. Many of us have thought of this as a pipe cream more than a decade ago. Now we're seeing LED light bulbs that are 80% more efficient than the light bulbs in our house today for less than $10 per bulb. And I am told by the experts that as we get to $5 to $6 per bulb, which will happen in the next two years, that market will take off into a massive market and we'll see widespread adoption of LEDs. And so across the board we're seeing tremendous success, but our work is not done. We have to accelerate into the curve here if we want to derive the economic benefit and if we want to address our urgent climate crisis. And so going forward, we can't back away. We have to accelerate into the final few laps of this race together. And so DOE has launched two specific initiatives that I think are now more important than ever as we are so close to the finish line. The first is a clean energy manufacturing initiative. Not enough for us to get the technology good enough and cheap enough so that it can get widely adopted. The American taxpayer expects all this hard work we've done not only to benefit the world and the environment in the world, but also our pocket books and our economy. And so going forward we're going to have a very focused initiative making sure that we are well positioned to win in the clean energy economy and the trillions of dollars that are going to be derived there. And as part of that, EER will be supporting the president's national network for manufacturing innovation. With the Department of Defense, we've already put out funds for four of these institutes that are really meant to drive U.S. economic competitiveness across the board, but specifically in clean energy and energy efficiency products. So manufacturing is going to be a major focus and we're looking forward to working with you in this area. The second is for so long we saw these clean energy technologies, especially let's say solar and rooftop and distributed energy technologies. We were so focused on just trying to make them cost competitive. And now within the next five to ten years these are going to be very broadly cost competitive. A lot of these distributed energy technologies including rooftop solar, including EVs, including demand responsive buildings. And so we're at a point in time where we need to make sure that together all of the stakeholders come together in utilities, the equipment providers, the non-profits, the PUCs, the Congress, other officials, the agencies to make sure that we modernize the grid and democratize the grid so that these low cost, low carbon technologies that we invented here in the United States as they could become directly cost competitive can continue to scale. And while maintaining a reliable grid and also making sure that we create the right kind of competitive cost structures so that these technologies can fall into the market naturally. So I think manufacturing and grid integration are two things that we really need to drive together. And one last pillar I'd say that's going to be very important, especially as a lot of these technologies get towards cost competitiveness we're finding is finance and soft costs. So as the technology costs go down significantly, we're finding especially in solar that we're no longer limited by the technology costs but by a lot of the paperwork and permitting and finance costs. And so a lot of us in the room are technologists and we've been driving on this problem and we've almost succeeded. And so now we've got to bring in some of America's best innovators and financiers, entrepreneurs and government officials to really cut through the red tape, find out ways to lower financing costs and really go this last lap to get these cost effective clean energy technologies onto the grid and onto our energy infrastructure. And so with that I want to thank you all for your hard work. We are so close to success. We are making so much progress. We cannot back down. We will not back down. I look forward to working with each and every one of you to make sure that the clean energy economy arrives and arrives in a way that the United States will benefit economically. Thank you very much.