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new biomanufacturing hub opened at University
of Manchester to further develop biotechnologies and
drive clean growth with £10 million government
support
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hub will be a key part of new Local Industrial
Strategy launched today setting out long-term vision
for Greater Manchester
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Greater Manchester’s ambition to become the
UK’s first city-region to achieve carbon neutral living
by 2038
A new facility to transform manufacturing processes and
make them more environmentally friendly, has opened today
(13 June 2019), as part of a new Local Industrial Strategy
for Greater Manchester.
Based at the Manchester Institute of Biotechnology, the new
Future Biomanufacturing Research Hub is backed by £10
million in government investment to develop new
technologies to transform the manufacturing processes of
chemicals, using plants, algae, fungi, marine life and
micro-organisms - both driving clean growth and making it
more commercially viable. The institute will also work
alongside universities including Imperial College London,
the University of Nottingham and the University College
London.
This Manchester facility will be 1 of 3 – with the
Universities of Swansea and Sheffield also set to host
similar hubs, each also benefiting from £10 million
government investment.
The strategy will build on Manchester’s worldwide
reputation and unique strengths to ensure it is at the
centre of the industries and jobs of the future. Ensuring
local and national government works together to deliver
high-quality and skilled jobs for the city region. The
Greater Manchester Local Industrial Strategy puts clean
growth at its heart with plans for the city-region to cut
its carbon emissions, take advantage of the global shift to
clean growth and the UK’s transition to net-zero.
The strategy unveils plans for Greater Manchester to become
the UK’s first city-region to achieve carbon neutral living
by 2038 as well as plans to further develop the region’s
leading position in the manufacturing of advanced materials
such as graphene, health innovation, and digital and
creative sectors that have fuelled growth in the region.
Greater Manchester is a trailblazer and one of the first to
agree a Local Industrial Strategy, a key part of the
government’s modern Industrial Strategy for the UK, driving
growth, productivity and boosting earning power across the
region.
Business Secretary said:
Greater Manchester has a strong and proud manufacturing
heritage and this new Local Industrial Strategy,
developed in partnership between government and local
leaders across the city-region, will ensure its world
leading position in this field is secured and built on
for the next generation.
At the heart of this strategy is clean growth and
Manchester’s determination reap the rewards of the UK’s
transition to a net-zero economy reinforced by the city
region’s ambition to be the first carbon neutral city in
the UK by 2038.
That’s why I’m also pleased that the University of
Manchester will be home to the new biomanufacturing hub,
backed by £10 million government investment, putting the
city at the forefront of exciting new developments to
drive clean growth – a prime example of our modern
Industrial Strategy in action.
Northern Powerhouse Minister MP said:
We are determined to create an economy that works for
everyone and the Northern Powerhouse’s first ambitious
Local Industrial Strategy will build on the strengths of
people across Greater Manchester so their communities can
prosper for years to come.
It demonstrates the power of local people and the
government working together to create good jobs, boost
productivity and increase people’s earning power.
Our refreshed Northern Powerhouse strategy will
complement this approach, and other Local Industrial
Strategies across the north, so people have the
opportunities to reach their full potential no matter
where they live.
Mayor of Greater Manchester, said:
This bold and innovative joint plan between Greater
Manchester and the government puts Greater Manchester
back as an industrial and social pioneer. This is a plan
focussed on people and ensuring we have the good quality
jobs to ensure people can succeed now and in to the
future. In Greater Manchester, we led the first
industrial revolution and are now in a position to lead
the fourth.
We want to be the UK’s leading green city-region, which
is why our ambition to achieve carbon neutral living in
by 2038 is right at the heart of these plans. We will
show that these plans are not just the right thing for
people and the environment but also right for our
economy.
We’re also setting out how advanced manufacturing along
with the digital and creative sectors will now help to
grow our economy and help us become a wholly
digitally-enabled city-region. The Local Industrial
Strategy will enable us to drive our productivity and
prosperity as we create the good, green jobs and skilled
workforce that will power this thriving city-region’s
economy into the future.
This comprehensive strategy is yet another step on our
devolution journey and will help Greater Manchester to
become one of the best places in the world to live, work
and invest in.
And we are putting together the pieces of the jigsaw to
reveal the big picture – a Greater Manchester where
prosperity, opportunity, health, hope and happiness are
widely and fairly shared across all our people and
places.
This new strategy – designed in partnership with the
Greater Manchester Combined Authority, Greater Manchester
Local Enterprise Partnership and developed in collaboration
with hundreds of businesses, public partners and civil
society – sets out how the city region will work with
government to:
- launch the first city-region mission to achieve carbon
neutral living, government welcomes this locally led
mission, which will support the delivery of the
government’s Clean Growth Grand Challenge
- set Greater Manchester up to be a global leader on
health and care innovation – creating new industries and
jobs, improving population health and extending healthy
life expectancy
- position Greater Manchester to be a world-leading
region for innovative firms to experiment with, develop and
adopt advanced materials and Made Smarter technologies in
manufacturing, facilitating the design of new products and
processes; it will support other national centres to build
the UK’s leadership in tomorrow’s technologies
- build on Greater Manchester’s position as a leading
European digital city-region, with the infrastructure,
skills, and networks needed to digitalise all sectors, and
internationally significant clusters in broadcasting,
content creation and media, and cyber security
- enable the digitalisation of all sectors; and
capitalise on the links between digital and creative
industries that feed internationally significant clusters
in broadcasting, content creation and media
- ensure that the education, skills and employment system
allow everyone to reach their potential and employers have
access to the skills required to deliver the Greater
Manchester Local Industrial Strategy
Greater Manchester and government are further supporting
economic growth and boosting local businesses through
investments including:
- state-of-the-art facilities for advanced materials
development, including £38 million for the National
Graphene Institute, £25 million for the Graphene
Engineering Innovation Centre, and £235 million of funding
for the Sir Henry Royce Institute BP
- providing £23.8 million in digital infrastructure
investment, bringing forward private investment of up to
£200 million
- devolving £6 billion for health and social care and £92
million per year for adult education through the Greater
Manchester Health and Social Care Partnership
- providing £663 million of Local Growth Funding and
£312.5 million through the Industrial Strategy’s
Transforming Cities Fund to fund local priorities,
including Metrolink and the Bee Network – a cycling and
walking network
Notes to editors
Work across the UK to illustrate the modern Industrial
Strategy in action can be viewed in
an interactive map,
developed by the Department of Business, Energy and
Industrial Strategy.
The Future
Biomanufacturing Research Hub is part of the £30
million government investment into the UK’s research and
manufacturing sector. It will be 1 of 3 manufacturing hubs
that, in total, bring together 67 partners from industry,
the public sector and seven universities from across the
country.