 The resources and energy analysis program REAP was devised in York now about five years ago. The idea being that we had this enormous evidence base on how we consume and the impacts of it, but weren't making this accessible to a policy audience at all different spatial levels, be it national, regional or local government. So the idea of REAP was to allow them to access this information and to ask what if questions about key policy areas that are of concern to them, albeit transport, housing, food, other products and services, behavioural change campaigns. And REAP now, as a software tool, is being used by over 60 government agencies across the UK and its popularity has meant that we are now producing it for other countries, Sweden being the next country on the list, but also a project now to actually implement REAP at a national level for the EU 27. It's our way of ensuring that evidence is built into the decision making process, that government bodies can be held accountable for the decisions that they make, and also that policies aren't built on anecdotal evidence but actually have some clear facts behind it.