 Green and growth must be compatible. In finding a new growth path for the British economy, I'm convinced green is a central part of it. Everybody needs to look at decarbonising their products and their services and in that way I think there is great growth potential for Britain. I think green growth for the UK is everybody's issue. It's not just about the green industries that we sometimes think of, people who make wind turbines or in environmental consultancy. They're important that everybody needs to go green and the opportunity for green retailers, green banks, green insurance offerings. This is a phenomenal growth opportunity for the British economy. I think there's 20 billion of extra value for the British economy by 2014-15 if we get it right. Well the government aims to be the greenest government ever and it certainly got the passion for being green but I think the challenge for government is it has many different departments and many different initiatives and frankly from a business point of view, despite valiant efforts by government, those initiatives don't look joined up to me so we don't have a coherent green growth strategy. We have parts of it but they sometimes overlap, they're sometimes disjointed and they don't always deliver. In the new CBI report, The Colour of Growth, we end this myth that it's a choice between being green or growing. We can have green growth but it's not a given that we achieve it. We need a coherent strategy and we need government to have a strategy which recognises that green growth isn't always going to be easy. It's just not about opportunity, it's also about facing the challenges and the challenges are how do we take the companies with us that have to use lots of energy because they're making steel or they're making chemicals. Those companies can't stop using energy just because energy may be high carbon. They have to be encouraged to find ways to remain competitive. So our report brings those two agendas together and ensures that growth genuinely is green.