 We are here today opening Phoebe English's show at the London Fashion Week, which is our fourth collaboration with fashion designers at the London Fashion Week. We've been kindly invited to show our work here by the British Library and the British Fashion Council, and the work includes lots of different systems that we're looking at in order to try and make our work with less environmental impact. This year we were keen to link our work with fashion designers to our climate season that we are currently working on. We are hosting a series of events and projects around COP26. Both the British Library and the British Fashion Council are doing a range of events around climate change and the impact of fashion and sustainable fashion on our environment. This event is exactly looking at positive and sustainable fashion for the future. Phoebe's a real advocate for sustainable fashion. She's been a true pioneer of sustainable practices for many years. The work that we have here is our newest research and development where we're looking at how we can put more back into our natural systems than we take out as a business and with our design decisions. The knitwares are a very significant project to us. We were working as regionally as possible trying to go from literally the soil to a garment as close to the surrounding of London as we could. We've been working with the British Library now for several years really encouraging that collaboration between industry and students. So the students get to come into the library, really experience the library resources and how it can affect and implement their research in here and really use these designers as case studies to inspire them about how to use the library and how important research is. So we do a master class and then following on from that we do a competition with the designers that the students can enter. It's a springboard and it's one of the many initiatives that the British Fashion Council has initiated for the universities in the UK and they get the opportunity for these competitions which are second to none. This year we are going to be asking students to use the British Library collections and inspirations of Phoebe's work to really push forward what their own thinking is about sustainability and climate change and how they're going to adjust their future practice. They're the future generations so what they do and what they learn is really going to be about the future of all of us.