Thank you for your question.
I think you are perfectly correct. Today, Taiwan is often an underestimated actor when it comes to development aid, and yet Taiwan not only has financial capacities, but, most importantly, it has relatively unique experience in the Indo-Pacific countries. Given that, it is obviously possible to expand cooperation projects and ensure that Taiwanese actors, whether governmental or not, are able to contribute to certain energy transition projects in the region and certain more broadly marine projects. For example, Taiwan plays an important role in promoting biodiversity and combating ocean plastic. I think those projects should lead to the most concrete possible cooperation between Taiwan and international partners to try to depoliticize that cooperation and to avoid, to reduce criticism from China to the extent possible.
If we are to successfully address global issues, including global warming and others, Taiwanese society is essential, as are all societies in the world. So there is a place for the Taiwanese, and we simply have to find the forms of cooperation that are the most practical and technical, and least political, possible, so that such cooperation can take place.