brenda equis alea's, director of climate science at the climate and energy program of the union of concerned scientists in washington dc. what sort of future is there for farmers considering the di situation we're seeing, for example here in parts of europe. thank you for the question right now. given the ongoing drought, it's going to be a matter of sharing very limited resources over the long term. it will be investment and infrastructure to design for today's level of climate change. last century, infrastructure is just not up to the task of supplying food and drinking water and buy a diversity needs. but this is happening fast. drought hit, you could face it 3 more dry months. what, what's going to happen if we're forced to wait until winter early, for example, a tough challenges because as we know, the agricultural sector of plants need a lot of water to thrive. and that's a lot of the a need and in the po river, what we see is that there was a loss of snow, the normal amount of snow that would get farmers and cities in italy through the summer, dry summer months. and that natural reser