After a busy week of international diplomacy, Prime Minister Tony Abbott is preparing to do it all again, but this time on home soil.
Mr Abbott returns to Australia on Friday morning ready to welcome world leaders to the G20 summit in Brisbane.
He flies in from Myanmar, where he has spent about 24 hours on the ground for the ASEAN East Asia Summit, where maritime security and the regional terrorism threat dominated the agenda.
On the sidelines, Mr Abbott met Myanmar President Thien Sein and opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
Before Myanmar, the prime minister spent two days in Beijing for APEC economic talks.
But his anticipated showdown with Russian President Vladimir Putin over the MH17 disaster and a meeting with US President Barack Obama on the fight against Islamic State in Iraq largely stole the thunder from the trade agenda.
In Sydney on Friday, Mr Abbott will meet British Prime Minister David Cameron for a business breakfast.
The two will then travel to Canberra, where Mr Cameron will address the parliament before heading to Brisbane.
Mr Abbott has vowed the weekend meeting of the world's 20 top economies "won't be a talk fest" but will focus on economic and jobs growth.
