 It's not normal that you try and create a high-technology company that's farming millions of insects right in the heart of London. But insects are just nature's perfect upcycling machines that create organic natural protein that we can feed to animals and eventually make humans. What people don't realise is there's a huge disconnect between what we eat and how we feed what we eat. People farm fish that we create are dependent upon wild caught fish to feed them. We feed fish to chickens. All animals need to eat fats and proteins to grow, just like we do. These proteins come from two sources traditionally, that's fish meal and soy protein. Soy protein is one of the biggest causes of deforestation in the rainforest. And fish meal means that we are dredging our oceans empty of small, pelagic fish which are the base of the global food web. There's only so much rainforest we can cut down, there's only so much oceans that we can actually deplete until we get to a really dangerous pinch point. We have the dual forces of a growing population with an increase in demand for protein. There's a moment in your life where you just think enough is enough and you have to do something about it. So I started EnterCycle. We're using black soldier flies. Each female lays a thousand eggs and in nature 99.9% of them will be eaten. However, we are able to conserve them and then utilize them into a full closed looped system. We feed the larvae on food waste such as brewery grains and coffee waste and they consume that and convert it into both protein to feed animals and fertilizers to grow more plants out of the same system. So actually to tackle not only the problem of deforestation and kind of emptying the oceans, we can also tackle food waste. The farmers of tomorrow are the engineers of today. We've created specialist chambers to look after the insects in their different life cycles. We can stack this four metres high in as many kilometres as long as you like. We have automation systems that are modulated and run by themselves 24 hours a day, 365 days a year in any environmental condition and that's vitally important to feeding a growing population. Insects are becoming a trend. The western diet has to kind of shift and change. But most importantly it's natural, it's normal and it's the way that we have to feed the future. We're facing big global challenges. People don't believe that they can make a change but you really, really can because you making a change is the only change you can really make. When it times is by nine billion people it makes a fundamental difference the way that we live in this planet.