 Cymarion Renewable Energy has become quite a diverse organisation in the last few years. We started out as a group of volunteers trying to find out what renewable energy to community scale might look like and how it can be owned by the community. In the last three or four years we've offered a lot of sustainability support to other groups and individuals in our local area. I'm working with land owners to do more hedgerow planting, supporting woodland, opening footpaths, looking at how we can protect rivers from pollution, working with groups of community members to teach them rural skills. We are looking at how you use waste products from land to turn it into, for example, compost or biochar and we've built wonderful building in which I'm sitting now, a studio which is an arts and sustainability hub for anything to do with crafts and learning how to fix your bike or your clothes or build a wind turbine. Cymarion is in a real time of growth at the moment. We've offered a lot more employment locally. We've really expanded the range of projects that we can offer. I'm pretty confident that the energy advice service will be more and more needed as this energy crisis isn't going to go away and similarly the cost of living crisis I think is something that we can really help to support people through. We're so chaffed to be nominated for St David's Awards. We know that there's so much amazing work going on in Wales so we're really proud to be finalists.