"We are making do with a building that’s essentially not fit for purpose," said the trust's director of midwifery Sally Bryant.
"The simplest way of putting it is, what have you got to lose?" he said."It's an hour out your life to begin with, but you're going to be a different person by the end - I'm a completely different person."
Countries have agreed a global deal to tackle shipping emissions, after nearly ten years of negotiations.The agreement covers the vast majority of the world's commercial shipping and means that starting in 2028, ship owners will have to use increasingly cleaner fuels or face fines.The deal was nearly derailed after Saudi Arabia forced a last minute vote and the US pulled out of talks in London – but it eventually passed on Friday.
Small island states and environmental groups were angry that a blanket tax was not agreed to and called the deal "unfit for purpose".Shipping accounts for
. But unlike many other sectors it has struggled to reduce its carbon footprint over the last decade and is reliant on fossil fuels like diesel.
But the agreement means it is now the first industry in the world with internationally mandated targets to reduce emissions.At the end of 2005, the singer was diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia, which returned in 2015 before he went into remission.
He co-founded the Love Hope Strength Foundation alongside his wife to help recruit bone marrow donors at live music shows.It also involved Peters and fellow musicians taking treks to the Himalayas, to peaks including Mount Kilimanjaro and Yr Wyddfa, also known as Snowdon, in his native Wales.
The charity's director, Kirsty Thomson, called him a "brilliant advocate" of the NHS, adding that he "loved life like nobody else I know".The 2007 concert was billed the "world's highest", watched by 3m online. In 2017, his Big Busk involved a walk between cancer wards at each north Wales hospital and ended on the summit of Snowdon.