In 2019 the UK was the first major economy to embrace a legal obligation to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050. More broadly, the 2021 UK Innovation Strategy sets out the UK government’s vision to make the UK a global hub for innovation by 2035 with a target of increasing public and private sector R&D expenditure to 2.4% of GDP to support the UK being a science superpower with a world-class research and innovation system. IP rights create an incentive for R&D which ultimately leads to innovation. Analysis and insights from IP data can therefore help provide a better understanding of how the IP system is being used and where and what innovation is taking place. Research and analysis of IP data is a key input to the ongoing work of the UKIPO’s Green Tech Working Group which seeks to: further the UK’s status as a global leader by making the UK’s IP environment the best for innovating green technology; develop and deliver IP policies to support government’s ambition on climate change and green technologies; and to help innovators best protect and commercialise their green tech innovations both at home and internationally. The UKIPO has been developing a broad portfolio of ‘green’ IP analytics research. A series of patent analytics reports have been published looking at green technologies, and analysis of how the UK’s Green Channel scheme for accelerated processing of green patent applications has been conducted. Patents have been used to identify technological comparative advantage within different green technologies at a country level, and new insights uncovered by mapping green technology patents to the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Trade mark data provides a timeliness and closeness to market factor that patent data does not, and complementary trade mark analysis of UK ‘green’ trade marks, identified using a machine learning algorithm, provides a commercialisation angle to our research.