Let me just clarify that, because you were actually questioning about the G20, and I just mentioned the difference of opinion within the G20 context. However, as UNEP, which is custodian of the SDG indicator, which is supposed to, as a mandate that actually was agreed upon by the head of all countries, remove inefficient fossil fuel subsidies, and, as an indicator, to measure and report on fossil fuel subsidies, we as a custodian agency developed the definitions, the scope and how to measure—basically the methodology of that—together with the OECD. It was an internationally agreed upon definition and methodology that was actually recommended to all of the member countries to follow and, based on the methodology, to measure and to report.
I would say that there is, indeed, an internationally agreed upon methodology that also includes a definition of what constitutes a fossil fuel and what constitutes a subsidy. There are more details in our report about the reasoning behind why we actually proposed to use this definition and so on. I cannot go into detail at the moment, but I would just emphasize there is, indeed, an internationally agreed upon methodology, which was adopted by the UN Inter-agency and Expert Group on SDGs.