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PRIVACY
Economic Development

£10bn 'most important' economic growth plan for Liverpool city region is unveiled

The Liverpool City Growth Plan aims to add £2.5 billion a year to the region's economy and create tens of thousands of jobs

An aerial view of the Knowledge Quarter in Liverpool, looking over the University of Liverpool and the Metropolitan Cathedral towards the city centre and the Mersey(Image: KQ Liverpool)

One of the "most important ever" strategies for the Liverpool City Region has been unveiled today - setting out proposals to inject £10bn into the regional economy and generate tens of thousands of jobs.

The Liverpool City Growth Plan - launched by Liverpool City Region Mayor Steve Rotheram this lunchtime - is characterised as a "bold and ambitious" blueprint for enhancing wages, attracting investment, improving living standards and delivering superior services for the 1.6 million people in the region.

Central to the strategy is an objective to lift the city region's productivity levels. The Mayor indicates that simply bringing these rates in line with the national average would contribute £6bn to the region's £43.3bn annual economy.

The mayor says the economic growth will be realised by capitalising on the city region's 'world leading' innovation, whilst fast-tracking expansion of its most productive industries including advanced manufacturing, health and life sciences, digital and technology and the creative sectors - underpinned by maritime, professional and business services and the visitor economy.

The strategy highlights the city region's £11bn investment pipeline and the Life Sciences Innovation Zone and LCR Freeport, operating under a shared Industrial Strategy Zone designation, as crucial catalysts for expansion. Mayor Rotheram has highlighted the potential in clean energy and emerging green technologies, including his ongoing vision for a new Mersey tidal power scheme, reports .

Another key project is the £550m Health Innovation Liverpool (HIL) initiative, which would be situated on the former Royal Liverpool Hospital site. The ambitious scheme aims to unite healthcare and private sector partners to revolutionise life sciences research and health innovation.

The HIL project could potentially generate over 2,000 jobs and deliver more than £1bn in economic benefits. The growth plan also mentions the tenfold expansion of Daresbury's cryo-plant, which will establish a new National Cryogenics Facility to serve a global quantum computing cluster.

Cammell Laird, with its advanced manufacturing and digital capabilities at the Birkenhead shipyard, is seen as vital for meeting the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's defence needs.