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Brilliant. Thank you very much, Jasmine and thank you, Heather as well for having me today. It's an absolute pleasure to be here. Um And uh and uh be able to speak to you all. So I'm just gonna um present my sls brilliant. This is working really nicely. Um Great. Um Yeah, so I just want to start this um session um to talk to you a little bit about the work that we're doing within Greener NHS. And I think um I'm very lucky to have the kind of early slots uh in today's agenda to be able to reinforce um the, the, the, the significant issues we're facing with climate change. Um So it's an absolute honor to be, to be here and to talk to you a little bit more about the work that we're doing in research and innovation within the Green NHS National Program, NHS England. Um So I guess to start with, um and hopefully, you know, you're very familiar with uh with this kind of introduction. Um We um and I just really want to take this opportunity to, to be able to reinforce this message is um I think we, we're pretty clear about this, sufficient evidence and understanding we have uh about the climate change and um the the sort of health crisis and health uh emergency that is associated with, um it threatens not only, not only health but also our ability to deliver health care, um and, and care for, for the patients. Um We know that it's got a significant direct impact on health um as well as indirect impact through, for example, air pollution and climate change is the single greatest environmental threat to human health. As it's, it's accounting for one in 20 death in the UK. Um And it's uh significantly driving health inequality, impacting the most vulnerable, the sort of very young um and very old populations and sort of driving that kind of uh widening inequality um in, in the patient that we care. Um So now why is this uh a problem for the NHS? The NHS is a significant contributor to greenhouse gas emission driving uh the change in our climate. Um And it's estimated around 4.5 to 5% of NHS impact to UK uh greenhouse gas emission and around 40% actually of public sector emissions. So being able to, um so obviously, the NHS is part of the problem, but it's also part of, of finding solution to this significant challenge as a significant contributor. Um And there's uh actions that the NHS and solutions that the NHS can find through the large workforce and uh the the multiple actions that the workforce is already aware and engaged with. We've got enormous opportunity to drive change in uh improving air quality, having more active population, um taking significant actions on how we optimize energy in our buildings. Um The way we deliver care towards safe, efficient, but also lower carbon care, but also through a more preventative and sort of healthier diets to improve population health. So a range of really significant opportunities within the NHS system um to try to drive change and take significant actions um to reduce high impact on climate change. So how the NHS has responded to this uh global challenge in 2020 We published our report and we became the first uh healthcare system in the world to make this commitment to be com at zero by 2045. As, as you can see in this line, which are all very with um by now we set two very specific targets and ambition to become net zero. The first one is to become net zero by 2040 for the emission that we control. Um So that would be the emissions that are on site, sort of the sort of fuel that we burn the gasses that we emit, but also indirectly through the electricity that we use. Um um and things like inhalers sort of further sort of emissions related to um transportation. The second target is to become net zero for the emissions that we have an influence over. And that's what we call the NHS carbon footprint plus to become net zero by 2045. And in this, as you can see in this graph, there's a lot of different type of emission, including some travel emissions uh related to a patient who visit to travel. But a significant proportion of that is coming from uh some of our commission services and our supply chain um and sort of working with our suppliers and our supply chain to decarbonise effectively. And I guess this um power chart just gives you a little bit of an idea of where those emissions are, where you've got the carbon footprint uh in green. Um And really trying to understand, you know, how much um is, is has got an impact. And in blue, you can see the, the um uh carbon footprint plus with the significant impact of the supply chain, but also the medicines are counting of all 20% in the supply chain, but also uh on our um direct carbon footprint with the uh emissions on site. Um So a wide range of different opportunities to have an impact on those emissions. And as you can see on the, on the graph, on the right hand side is an acknowledgement that these emissions happened everywhere in the system. So not just the large acute hospitals, but also in ambulance services, our community and primary care um are sort of non clinical activities and there's a broad range of different emissions that we need to tackle and um take specific actions to reduce our impact. And that opens a broad range of different opportunities for us as a healthcare system um to, to make significant impact. So now the National Green NHS program is structured around key areas of actions to reduce emissions. As you can see very briefly here. Um There's a team and efforts to reduce emissions associated to energy um estates are our assets within different NHS uh um buildings um But also specific work around travel, transportation that includes visitors, patients, staff, the fleet, um active transportation or active travel, you know, cycling. Um So lots of different uh uh uh activities there. We've got lots of work around medicines. Um supply chain obviously does work on food and and nutritional aspect to improve health. Um reducing our impact on how we deliver care, digital transformation, how we engage with the workforce through training actions, awareness. Um Obviously, the work in research and innovation which I'll go into in a moment. Um But there is also how we adapt our health care system and our buildings to a change in climate with increased um heatwaves, flooding. Um and, and just adapting generally to climate change. And all of this is underpinned obviously by the data that we capture how we monitor progress, how we analyze that data. So that's how the kind of Green NHS program is is structured and to support the key targets um in the net zero report. So what I want to do now is go a little bit more into the research and innovation aspect. And why is research and innovation so important in the drive to reduce um our carbon footprint towards our net zero targets. And that's actually highlighted in the graphs that are in the delivering a net zero report where you can see that focusing on the carbon footprint, the model pathway towards net zero, taking a range of different actions around electrification, what we can do in our energy in our building um through the emissions we've got with our medicines. Um And as you can see here, um there's a large proportion that is associated with research innovation. Um It's just a sort of we don't fully know what we can do, but we can do something and we've got huge opportunities here to reduce um emissions related to, to our carbon footprint through um research um evidence and innovative approaches and technologies similarly with the carbon footprint plus. Um and I've put the diagram here, you can see the trajectory and and the significant importance in the light gray here of research and innovation to contribute to reduction in carbon footprint plus towards our net zero targets. So that's why research innovation is really important. It's, it's got a huge part to play um to help us achieve those targets. And now I just wanted to show you what we're doing in research within the program um to support these targets and um there's lots of different work and objectives to help us there. But what we're really focused on uh more recently is first of all, in understanding that um to be able to uh generate the evidence and support those net zero targets um through research and innovation, we need to understand the gaps and the needs. What are those challenges, those live NHS challenges and how we can then connect with the relevant stakeholders and and and the relevant um supporting action to intervene where is needed towards our net zero targets. Another area of focus is accelerating research opportunities um and working with the research sectors, the partners to support specific activities um towards net zero. research innovation, supporting what funding is required for this and funding initiatives um that support the sort of delivery of the more sustainable healthcare system. Um What are those uh funding requirements? How we can um make them um develop them around specific targeted area of, of