 I'm going to talk today about the issue of capacity building, how it came about in the Paris Agreement, why is it important, what we are doing about it, and then what's going to happen here in COP24 on it. So the issue of capacity building is something that has been a very much a motherhood and a Popeye issue. Everybody likes it. Everybody wants to support it. Nobody's against it. Over the years one of the aspects in which it has been delivered has had a problem associated with it, which the developing countries felt keenly about and brought up in the beginning of the Paris Agreement and then by the end of the Paris Agreement we had a new article on capacity building Article 11. And that issue was the fact that in the order of well over a billion dollars or euros had been spent on capacity building for developing countries on climate change, but almost all of that money was spent on international consultants from the developed countries who were flown in state a few days, did work jobs and flew out. And this fly in, fly out phenomenon, although it did help, left nothing really behind in terms of long-term capacity. And climate change is a long-term problem that you have to have capacity at the national level built over time and you just can't do it by fly in, fly out consultants. And this was what we argued for in Paris. We got the article, the article now agrees that this new paradigm of building in-country national capacity in every country developed and developing to tackle climate change both through mitigation as well as through adaptation is required. And in particular with regard to supporting the developing countries build that capacity it needs to be invested in building national capacity building systems and not just the odd workshop here and there. In response to that one of the things that I have been doing along with many other colleagues in our support for the least developed countries has been to set up a universities consortium of least developed countries. We call it LAC, LUCCC, the least developed countries university consortium on climate change, starting with 12 universities but aiming to reach all 48 countries. Every single least developed country has more than one university. My country Bangladesh has more than 100 universities. These institutions already exist. They don't have a lot of capacity at the moment to tackle climate change but they can be capacitated. They can be invested in and all the money that I mentioned earlier, none of it went to them. It went to international consultants. So we need to change that paradigm. We need to invest in these universities and build. It'll take time. It won't happen overnight. But by 2030, if we invest in them, we should be able to produce new generations of climate resilient citizens in all the least developed countries in particular. Now, in the COP itself, this is an issue that, as I said, has universal acceptance. Everybody agrees with it. Everybody supports it. It's about how do you deliver it that we now have discussions. And many people are doing many kinds of side events on this. Lots of consortia are growing around it, which is a good thing. Many donors are supporting it, which is another good thing. One of the things that we have done and we will be doing again here was last year at COP 23, we organized the first single full day called the Capacity Building Day, which we ICAD, the International Center for Climate Change and Development, together with IIT and other colleagues and UNFCC secretariat and the Paris Committee on Climate on Capacity Building, which was set up under the Paris Agreement. We all together did a one-day event, which went very well. And so this year, we're going to do it again on Tuesday of the second week, which is the 11th of December, and it's going to be a much bigger affair because we've had many, many more people wanting to join. So we hope this will be a big event. Many people will join it and be able to share what they're doing on Capacity Building. And the most important thing being rapidly engaging with doing it on the ground and enabling people all over the world, particularly young people, to become climate resilient, both with regard to mitigations as well as with regard to adaptation.