 Mae'r newid ydyn ni'n gyfnodol o gael, drwy'r popeth ac eu cyllidau ar gyfer yw meddwl yn ymgyrch. Mae'r gynhyrch yn rhoi ar gyfer y gafel a'r gael, ac mae'r gael yn cael ei gael i gael wedi eu brydau ac yn elu'r cyd-oedau. Mae'r gael y gallu'r gael yn cael ei gael i'r gwybod. First of all it will help manage the risks for poor people and their vulnerability and secondly it will present some great opportunities for poor communities to leapfrog in terms of technology. So leaping to a lower carbon future, helping connect all the millions of people who are on at the moment unconnected to the grid to give them energy access to transform their lives. There will be a number of challenges. There will be people that will see a benefit in having a separate climate financial additionality question which will go through this year. There will be people who want to see climate environment issues separate still from development and want to see it as additional. I think the second thing will be people will emphasise trade-offs. They will suggest that somehow a better economic growth is in a higher carbon way and that's the most important thing that has come first. Again, I don't think the evidence suggests that is the case. The new climate economy is very clear that that doesn't have to be the case. It's not a threat very much. There's some very clear kind of lots of co-benefits and lots of climate wind winds. And I just think also there's something about getting mobilised around it quickly. It took quite a while for us to get mobilised around the MDGs. I think now the imperative is we just need to mobilise behind the SDGs quickly and effectively and stop working together in a complementary and integrated way. I think internationally what we're doing is we're seeing a series of events this year so financing for development in Addis. In July we're seeing the SDGs, we're seeing the COP in Paris and then we're seeing the WTO trade ministerial all as an interconnected set of events important in their own right, but also important in setting a new trajectory and a new sustainable development paradigm out there. And so what we're doing is we're working very hard politically to negotiate that at an international level. We're also trying to put it into practice in the way that we are doing our business. So the way that we're using our climate finance for example is an integrated way to mainstream climate and environment issues throughout our business. And the way in which we're thinking about low carbon futures, I'm building resilience of communities so that they can withstand shocks and they can withstand the kind of way industry. So we're basically embedding it in our business and we're doing that, supporting that with the better use of our climate finance in a mainstream way across our business.