 Okay, so we are starting. So please tell us about yourself, your name, your title and what you were facilitating here during the symposium. My name is Sangeetha Dewey. Sorry, I think it's a joke. Because otherwise it makes sounds when it moves. Or like this is good. Yeah, I think like this it won't move, right? Yeah, perfect. That's great. And let's just hope the scarf doesn't fall. I think that's the issue. It looks like this is good. Okay. So we start again? Yeah. So please tell us about yourself, your name, your title and what you were facilitating here during the symposium. My name is Sangeetha Dewey. I'm the FAO Regional Statistician for Asia and the Pacific. And I'm facilitating a discussion tomorrow morning on the role of data and statistics for evidence-based decision making in agri-food systems transformation. So please tell us what your takeaway message is from this forum and from within your own area of expertise. On the one hand, from the forum, we have to really think about food and agriculture as a system and not in isolated components. It's not just about producers and farmers. It's not just about consumers and food safety and food waste. It's the entire spectrum of activities. This is really important as a statistician because of course it's very easy to focus just on one aspect of data and statistics. And I think we have to look across all the aspects. You know, we have to look at in the context of the 5F crisis. How is that impacting on consumers' affordability, especially those consumers who are the most vulnerable? How do we on the part of farmers ensure that they have inputs? And how is this affecting their production and their ability to support food security and food availability? And then on the part of the food processors, the retailers, the traders, what is their role in the food systems? And how can they also play a part in ensuring both healthy diets but also affordable diets that are not just affordable for consumers but also are affordable for all the players in ensuring that they make enough of a profit that they can continue their activities. So my question would be, what will be the future of this region? Will it be successful to be able to transform other agricultural systems? Well, we've heard many speakers talk about the importance of evidence for decision making. Increasingly, traditional ways of gathering data are becoming very expensive. So we have to look at alternatives. And I think we have a perfect example in the COVID pandemic where we were getting almost real-time information to inform not only how governments establish policies like border closures, border controls, vaccination policies, but also how we as individuals respond and make our own plans to mitigate risk with regards to how we interact with other people, how we socialize, how we travel. So I think for me the really important thing is how can we start thinking about getting more real-time information at lower cost and back into the hands of not just the traditional decision makers as we see them, the academics, the international organizations, the governments, but also the farmers themselves. Thank you very much. Anything else you would like to add? For me it's been really interesting to be part of this symposium because of course when you're gathering statistics you still rely on the experts and the big questions they need to answer in order to design the mechanisms and the content for the data that you collect and that you analyze and that you produce.