In 2016, building upon "Every Breath We Take", a document published by the
Royal College of Physicians and
Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, which attributed 40,000 premature deaths per year to
polluted outdoor air, the Alliance published its first report, "A Breath of Fresh Air". The report proposed a series of actions to clean up the air and tackle climate change. It considers how methods that use collaboration can deal with climate change challenges, particularly for cutting carbon dioxide and improving air quality, by
coal phase-out. In a letter to then Health Secretary
Jeremy Hunt, the Alliance highlighted threats of extreme weather events and the need for preparedness. In 2017 the Alliance collaborated with
King's College London to show that polluted air covered more than 50% of NHS facilities in London. In June 2019 the Alliance was one of several concerned environmental organisations to write to the then Prime Minister, Theresa May, urging her to urgently commit to the recommendation of the independent
Committee on Climate Change for the UK to set a target for net-zero greenhouse gas emissions before 2050. In June 2019, the Prime Minister responded by confirming that a 2050 target would be set in law, the legislation being passed later that month. In early 2020 the Alliance supported Sir Simon Stevens' announcement that the NHS would aim for "net zero", call on hospitals to reduce carbon from their premises, switch to better asthma inhalers and encourage staff to take more active travel. Later in the year, its report "All-Consuming: Building a Healthier Food System for People & Planet" (2020) makes a series of recommendations, including calling for campaigns to inform the public on diet, relaying messages relating to climate and putting labels on food to show what impact that food has on the environment. It calls for a food carbon tax on all food producers calculated according to the carbon footprint of their products. == Members ==