can i quote you the former prime minister of tuvalu, enele sopoaga, and forgive me if i have mispronounced pacific islands forum. he said he was stunned by the un—pacific tenor and manner of scott morrison, the australian prime minister, who was, in his words, trying to water down the wording of the communique, their agreement on acting on climate change. they wanted really strong action and the australian prime minister was sitting there saying, "no, no, i'm not going to sign that." there's always different perspectives. what australia was doing in that context was taking out some things from that communique which are unrealistic and untenable. basically no reference to coal or end reliance on that kind of thing, which is responsible for many of these issues, as you would expect, wouldn't you? well, saying there should be no new coal—fired power stations by 2020, which is now, that is patently unrealistic. so, if you want to have credibility internationally, it's good to put out a statement that has credibility. that was our fundamental point. do you think australia has credibility intern