 We have five ideas we want to present to you on stage in very quickly and out of place. So we have five of our marketplace ideas of great responses to climate change offered to stand up and present their ideas in a very big room in the house. We have a diverse array of responses that includes a public campaign, an app development, a research project, an artistic, musical endeavours, and a youth initiative. We're going to ask each of those campaigners or creative responders to come to the stage and share their ideas to be more flavorful and market-like for the great community. So I welcome my first one as a portion cabinet, who is representing the country. My favorite, very, great issue of the year, I'm just going to go back to 1991, I'm 7 years old, I was running this very long time, visiting the school that I attended at the University of New York University, and we were hosting a fair trade and social justice league. It was the biggest excitement. I can assure you that that week after you come along, we had a convoy of cars, we did a huge assignment. I'd like to say that 27 years on and having conversations about vegetable gardens is much easier than it was then. You were just really a hippie kind of in the past if you were talking about gardens, and I'm sure a lot of you would know where I'm coming from. It wasn't as easy, but now, thankfully, we're all on the platform and talking about this conversation. So to go on to the country school campaign, our campaign started in 2016. We were a group of individuals who got together on the Zero Way start on Facebook page, very concerned about the disposable cooks, and the managers of the other were going to the country if they were not recyclable, and they were simply reciting. So together we formed a committee, and we got to try and address the issue. And there are 22,000 cooks and lids disposed of every hour in Ireland. It's a nominal amount for something that is used literally for 10 to 15 minutes. We know, obviously, that the disposal of these items is an issue, but more importantly, it's a whole lifecycle analysis of a product, a single-use product. So we tried to engage with people to ask them to think about the long materials, the transport of these goods, the reduction, the distribution, and then the end of life disposal. All of these activities have a target footprint, every single one of them, for something that we might take and throw away. But we tried to find solutions to this, and we got to let you in place by our government because that's the best thing to do, is to try and introduce their reward system for customers who carry their own reusable cup. And we know the plastic bag, let me, has worked, but we haven't got that choice. So we said about an agent have faith all across the country and asking them to offer a discount to anyone who provided it, probably a very useful cup. And if they didn't provide a discount, they could also provide an incentive by the match just now. Any cafes who participated in our campaign, we mapped them and geotyped them and if anyone was too quick on any of these icons on our map, they would see the name of the cafe and the discounted incentive that they offer. So we always ask cafes to offer a ceramic cup first. You'll see cafes who actually have cups in their cafes, but we'll just sit and sit. It's the most environmentally friendly of the options. Cafes are also rewarded by a promoted process social media app for us. We work with companies, universities, colleges, all types of different groups across the country. And the great thing about it is you can see how young and older actually interacting with one another. In particular, tiny tax rooms, where it's predominantly retarded people who might have settled in a tiny tax room, they'll actually work with transition year students and schools in their locality to bring about a campaign to their area. So it's really important that it actually involves everybody. And companies are also very interested in reducing their waste and reducing their credit programs. Our main message is all about your reviews. We want to change people's behavior. The quote is not called to save the funds. We're very well aware of that. But what we want to do is tap into people thinking more about their reviews and reducing their impact on the environment. And hopefully they will bring that concept to other aspects of their lives. So conscious consumer is what we are aiming for. And also to look at sustainable goals. Sustainable development goes 11 or 12. If anybody ever wants any help bringing a campaign to their area or to their new college, university, organization, please contact us. As I've been talking a lot about the media, it is an app called GOGO and it's being presented by Hugh Elton and I'm going to move on. And we're very happy. The climate change has been understood for the last 50 years. We now only have 12 years to limit global warming to 1.53 Celsius. We're kind of going to use our training and we're passionate about technical solutions. But in this kind of timeframe, we're turning to behavioral change to drive system change. At what better place to start than food? It comes to 30% of global emissions. It's something that we can all relate to. And it's something we interact with every day, multiple times a day. The perfect place to start for large scale behavioral change. So when we started, we pretty quickly realized that we weren't alone. 83% of Europeans say they would happily spend some more money every month to choose more sustainable options. And 54% of those said that their food would be the first place they would try. So what's the problem then? Well, the problem is that when we go to the supermarket, I'm sure some of you look at this, should I buy those loose bananas or those organic ones wrapped in non-recyclable plastic? So, we decided to design an app that's pretty simple to use. We just take a photograph of your food, chuck, and receive. We then give you a five-star rating. There's space both on the greenhouse gas emissions associated with the product and also its nutritional content. And then give you tips for more sustainable choices the next time you shop. More importantly, shop your program. First of all, I would say it's important for the environment to reduce their impact every single day. By the time one million people reduce their personal environmental impact by making small environmental changes such as reducing meat consumption, it will have the equivalent impact of taking 130,000 car operas. To achieve this, we partnered with Swiss data scientists called Eternity to help us have data about our ratings. Behaviorally convinced in the University of Auburn to understand how we can encourage more green-backed areas for different personality types. We're part of the Climate Kick Accelerator Program, and this year we'll recognise the UN Young Champions of the Earth for Europe. The UN keeps access to networking and marketing support, but most importantly, it gives us the platform to share our message. This year we'll be presenting you one of the UN Environmental Assembly in Nairobi in front of 150 of the environmental ministers in the world. We'll launch the app in January, and if you'd like to see what you've heard, come talk to us afterwards. And if you're working in the green industry, we'd love to learn how you could collaborate. Saving the world doesn't have to be difficult. Thank you. I'd like to thank the organisers for the opportunity to come and tell you about my concept. I've been pushing this concept for nearly 40 years that we have this incredible opportunity of the West Coast of Ireland with an energy resource that is untapped and is possible to power our whole country if we need to. So I have this vision, I've had this vision for many years, and now I think it's an opportunity that you can see this realise in Senate Proposer, which I am about to grandiosely call the second Shannon scheme. The motivation, of course, is to try and move towards a sustainable low-carbon economy, low-carbon energy system, because we are really way off our targets, the binding targets for 2030 in relation to our greenhouse gas emissions. If you look at the Shannon region, it's a significant location for the production of electricity in Ireland. 20% is produced at money point in a coal-fired power station. The power station, in theory, is going to be decommissioned maybe between 2025 and 2030, with immediate removal of 50% of our current CO2 emissions. The consequence of the closure, however, will be a significant local job loss and we need a solution that's sustainable and important for the local community. If we look to the west coast of Ireland, then the wave energy resource there is huge. The project really aims at mobilising the citizens of the Shannon region to tap this resource, create sustainable environment while facilitating the transition to low-carbon electricity in Ireland. The development of wave energy converters has taken some time, and I've known that throughout my whole career as an academic, and a number of spectacular failures have occurred on the way. The commercialisation of wave energy converters is not a nearing reality, with the Irish company leaving the field and they're building a one-megawatt prototype in the US after all 15 years of development and they're ready to come back to Ireland with a market rollout in 2021. In 1925, the Irish government in the new state showed great courage and foresight in investing one-fifth of its annual budget to construct the first Shannon scheme with a power station at Armour Crusher. That's equivalent to an investment of 16 billion euros today. This power the whole country at that time, but now only powers about 3%. My proposed project to be seen as the second Shannon scheme of development in the Shannon region with the first phase, a construction of an offshore wave power station between now and 2032, with a full buildout of 900 megawatts by 2040. If this project is accepted by the Irish government, we've allocated already 4 billion euros on the project Ireland 2040 for rural regeneration and climate action. There, the device holds can be delivered to the Shannon estuary, filled out with a power conversion system there, and the local industry will develop around this activity to provide replacement employment for the redundant money point staff. The wave energy power station will comprise an array of many devices between the onshore wind turbines connected together electrically. The deployment offshore is made using tugs like those already stationed at points and the subsequent operation maintenance will provide more local employment for the dwindling and fishing industry. The second Shannon scheme will be connected to the shore at money point via a subsea cable which avoids constructing pylons in County Clare and so reduces the environmental impact. The project will provide significant carbon free electricity for Ireland and it will also provide sustainable long-term employment for the citizens of the Shannon region. This project model led by the citizens can be replicated in coastal communities worldwide. Offshore islands and developing regions can use the electricity produced to create portable water, make ice for the fishermen as well as powering the local communities. So I'd like to look for your support in seeing this happening in the future. This is the organizers for inviting you to share musical positioning with you. In Norse mythology, the world of ice melted and from the ice water, a giant called Emmer was spawned. And this piece of music was created by recording hundreds of water drops falling from the propulsion that you see in the image and these recordings were formed into a piece of music compact and this was then released with recordings of both a propulsion and a mechanism of both each other's voice. There's also a visualisation of this piece to look at if you want a more immersive experience, you could even close your eyes. The piece itself is a chilly icy piece. That shows the impression of the chaos and the coffee that are hitting from the mountain of ice. So this is... It's no stranger to say that it's not my third time trying to escape from this. I know she will send her way, inspired to take on a resolution herself and look at the rest of her mind and think that he doesn't confuse her. We'll ask each other. Last year and a half, I've done some pretty cool things. I've done a weekly beach thing where I've found some cool things and some not so cool things. I've written a weekly song where I write about things I find on the beach and what's going on this week. I write about places on the other side of the world who don't have a retro system. I also write about cool inventions and a short story just in case any children are reading so they don't know about completion and passing. I also found a way to get the first two seasons in Ireland. A season isn't an amazing thing so it's caused an invention, it's a bin that's put in the water and has a pump that pulls in the rubbish and pushes out all the water. We still cause ourselves to do an Australian creative thing. And I've done a lot of public speaking so it just didn't case anyone wants to know and I tell them about passing and why I care about the sea, like I'm doing right now. In the future, there are still things I would like to achieve for example, I want to launch a philosophy on the beach cleaners and shopping bag, which is a bag made out of recycled fishing rig. I also would like to continue on my job, continuing beach cleaning and next year, and if I can, I want to go to Indonesia where I hope to help clean the classic river and I also want to talk to children who live there to exchange ideas and just so they can see what they think in the world and how they think they can change the culture in the world. As we all know, there's a war going on. A war against classes. And the funny thing is, I know we're going to win this war and there's three reasons why I know this. Reason one, because everyone's more aware of the situation now and they're going to squeeze it under the carpet and they're doing what they can to help now. Reason two, because people are coming up with this awesome invention every day, for example, the shampoo bar. Two please tell it. And one of my favorites, seasoning. And reason three, because children my age and younger are taking action and responsibility and do enough to make my parents' generation happy. Goodbye.