A new project will support more than 100 jobs and eventually
generate more than £87 million for the South Wales economy.
- The first of the growth and regeneration projects in
Port Talbot will receive £8.2 million from the Tata Steel / Port
Talbot Transition Board.
- Plans will support more than 100 jobs and eventually generate
more than £87 million for the South Wales economy.
- Tata Steel / Port Talbot Transition Board has
now allocated £51 million into the local
community.
More than 100 jobs are expected to be created and
supported with the UK Government announcement of £8.2
million funding for the first regeneration project in
Port Talbot with other projects set to follow.
Chairing the latest meeting of the Tata Steel Port
Talbot Transition Board today (6 February) Welsh Secretary
will announce £8.2 million for the South Wales
Industrial Transition from Carbon Hub (SWITCH) supporting more
than 100 jobs.
The South Wales Industrial Transition from Carbon Hub project
will redevelop a four-acre site at Harbourside, Port
Talbot which will include the construction of additional
shared space, undertake flood mitigation and the provision of
specialist equipment. This investment will help establish an
Innovation District in Port Talbot.
This will allow the development of a new facility targeted at
supporting the steel and metal industry and supply chain to
reduce carbon emissions in production. The facility is expected
to create and support more than 100 jobs and eventually benefit
the South Wales economy by £87 million.
The latest funding comes from the UK Government's £80m Tata Steel
/ Port Talbot Transition Board fund which, since last July, has
announced £51 million to support individual steelworkers and
businesses in Tata Steel's supply chain to protect jobs and grow
the local economy. The latest announcement is the first project
to support growth and regeneration of the region. In the coming
months, there will be up to £30 million (as part of the overall
£80 million) put into growth and regeneration projects.
This funding supports the UK Government's mission to kickstart
economic growth and will help deliver the ambition to raise
living standards in every part of the United Kingdom as set out
its Plan for Change.
Welsh Secretary said:
We said we would back the community of Port Talbot through
Tata Steel's transition and we continue to do exactly that.
In just six months there has now been over £50 million announced
by the Transition Board to support individual steelworkers and
their families, businesses in the supply chain and now on a major
regeneration project for the town.
Millions more will follow and while this remains a very difficult
time for Tata workers, their families and the community, we are
determined to support our steel communities whatever happens.
The Secretary of State will also ensure that work is progressing
at pace to develop a range of wellbeing and mental health
interventions. This work will prioritise the provision of mental
health support, help build community cohesion, support the
delivery of wellbeing initiatives and peer support within the
local community including that currently delivered via local
community and other support groups. Funding to support
this work will be announced at the next transition board meeting.
Cabinet Secretary for Economy, Energy and Planning said:
This announcement builds on the investment that will be unlocked
through the recent Celtic Freeport and other investments and
innovation we are supporting in and around Port Talbot.
Working alongside our Transition Bard partners, we will continue
to do everything we can to provide opportunities for growth
wherever they arise as well as making sure that the right
assistance and support is in place for those impacted by the Tata
changes.
The Leader of Neath Port Talbot Council, Cllr Steve
Hunt, said:
We welcome this extra tranche of funding as the SWITCH project
will attract jobs and investment to Neath Port Talbot as it
progresses over the next few years. It also means this area can
build on its long history in the steel and metals industries to
address the challenges of our time.”
Professor Helen Griffiths, Pro Vice Chancellor for Research and
Innovation at Swansea University, said:
SWITCH will leverage Swansea University's history of uniting
academia, industry, local authorities, and government. This
significant investment will make Welsh research and
innovation expertise even more accessible to business and
industry, and help stimulate economic growth, provide long-term
employment and foster a thriving community.
The South Wales Industrial Transition from Carbon Hub (SWITCH)
delivers research to support industrial decarbonisation
transition. This announcement of Transition Board funding for the
SWITCH Harboursideproject will create a new base for SWITCH. This
will add to the facility's £20 million funding from the Swansea
Bay City Deal, which is also part-funded by the UK
Government.