 So we're in an area northern Australia, which accounts for a big area of savannah burning. The Kimberleys is an area northwestern Australia where we carry out a savannah burning project which we want to talk to you about in terms of mitigation. Fire people think of fire and they think about all the bad things. In the Kimberleys we have really hot fires, higher fuel load density in the hot summer months, and it can be destructive, but you can manage it. And we've developed a methodology using traditional fire management, historically Aboriginal people were carrying out fire management until settlement when that stopped because people were removed off their lands, but historically they had a way of managing fire. This project allows people to get back out on country and to start the process again where they're integrating fire management, traditional fire practice, with a method for creating the management of fire going out doing fire burns on country. We use our ranges, biodiversity ranges. There's a cycle in terms of what we do as a method, looking at mitigation, how do we set up a process so that we can get the benefits of carbon abatement credits, and our groups are using fire differently. There's all different types of fires. Not all fires bad. What we do is we look at cool fire burns in cooler months rather than the hot summer burns. We can control the fire and we can contain it, and we can contain or regulate the emissions differently to a hot fire burn. What's different about this is that our traditional owner groups use our native title rights recognition to run this project. It's different for us in Australia, and the difference is that we get all of the benefits that are created out of the carbon abatement plus the benefits of the management and ownership of the process. Here you can see our groups do a lot of planning around it. They look at the historic information of the previous year's fire burns. They look at all the science information, the cultural data that they need to plan about how to undertake the fire burning. A lot of the Kimberley's it's remote areas, 420,000 square kilometers. We have some rough roads, a lot of it's inaccessible. You can only go so far with the roads, and people will get out on country and reconnect with country is the other benefit that we can get. The other way we do it is by air, by helicopter, so you have to go out because you can't access it any further by road or by sea. So you get up on a helicopter and they use this device, an incendiary device that drops a pallet to start strategic fires all along. And from that you can see, this is what they call mosaic burning, it's a control burn. You create the fire breaks in a strategic way so that when you get the late season fire burns they're not going to burn as high or as out of control as they normally would if you had a higher fuel density load. Here you can see the ranges, the community people here using the modern technology of satellite tracking to monitor the fires that they set. They can pretty much manage those fires and know exactly what's happening. They've got to look at and they've got to understand the wind conditions, the whole range of other conditions that affect the way the fire operates. Here you can see the difference between fires in the blue areas that have been burned strategically and a few pockets of red here and there. It would have looked a lot different had it been not managed properly and not controlled in the way that they've done strategically with this fire process. The result of this is that you can reduce the emissions between cool fire burns and high fire burns in terms of the emissions that are going to CO2 and the heat emissions into the atmosphere and of course the benefit is that we're doing our bit for mitigation and we're controlling the effect of fire. The result of that is that we can protect our flora and fauna, our livelihoods, sustainability, protection of those species or other types of vegetation that would otherwise be destroyed and sometimes gone forever if the fires are so hot in terms of the damage that they can produce. The other benefits are that our range of groups develop conservation biodiversity type ranges. You create employment and jobs for people out there. It's reconnecting people to their countries and their lands. The cultural connection is really important. So this has other benefits around strengthening their ties to land. Here the gullien-finched threatened species whose habitats can be quite easily destroyed by high fires and perhaps gone forever. So some of those pockets of areas in the Kimberleys, if the fire continues the way it does, threats to species like this that are threatened species like the gullien-finch will disappear. We have rock art sites around the area which also can be damaged by high fires. So this is also critical and important in terms of people's cultural places and areas of significance. So these are the benefits of looking after different things. We do a comparison of the savannah burning and we look at the way in which other parts of the world and the globe have other savannas that also have burns. We are very interested in the transferability of this methodology and this savannah burning project that we're doing because we think it has application in other parts of the world. So all of the benefits that we can get from managing our country and using our cultural values and knowledge and the link between western science and cultural knowledge leads to the ongoing sustainability and our future interests for our people and the next generation. So thank you.