 My name is Henry Cook and I am the project officer for the Biodiversity Means Business Project. It is cited on the Wrexham Industrial Estate and it's part of a North Wales Wildlife Trust project. Originally we started the project in 2016 as a project to work with businesses on the industrial estate. There are over 365 businesses on the industrial estate and a lot of them have land around the edges of their units which we work to sort of manage sustainably. Currently there's a lot of practices going on including mowing and development and things which threaten some of the special species that live here. There are things like barn owls here and other rare species which need our help and can thrive in this setting. Well the Wrexham Industrial Estate because of its unique history is actually more diverse and supports more species and habitats than the surrounding countryside. So what we are trying to do is look after the wildlife within the industrial estate but also provide wildlife corridors that extend out into the local countryside and connect wildlife across the entire area. Well since the start of the project we've seen the business land holdings and areas owned by or managed by local communities and farmers improve markedly for wildlife so we've seen areas of land that were previously mowed 15 times a year of very little biodiversity value, managed now as wildflower meadows benefitting bees and birds and butterflies and everything that benefits from these habitats. We've seen orchards planted, we've seen woodlands planted, we've seen hedgers renovated. It's been absolutely fantastic. So the main benefits of the funding from the sustainable management scheme has been to allow us to contact new businesses, bring businesses into the project, speak to them and let them know there's another way of doing things, one where we embrace wildlife and bring it to our doorsteps. The positive effects not just on wildlife but on people are significant. This includes mental health benefits and well-being benefits from people being able to get out, enjoy the industrial estate and get a breather during their working day.