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Economic Development

Autumn Statement delivers for the Humber as devolution deals and freeport extension secured

Hull and East Yorkshire and Greater Lincolnshire proposals agreed with business backing as freeport wish granted

Delight for both sides of the Humber Bridge and across the quaysides and terminals as th Autumn Statement detail is divulged.(Image: Future Humber / Getty Images)

Devolution hopes for both banks of the Humber have been honoured in the Chancellor’s Autumn Statement, with vital freeport benefit extensions secured.

Hull and East Yorkshire and Greater Lincolnshire have had their proposed deals agreed by government, setting the path for powers and funding pots to head north from Westminster. Both will become mayoral combined authorities, with elections anticipated in May 2025.

The long road to further regional control had been complicated with the split of the pan-Humber local enterprise partnership, after local authorities were forced to choose a single path. It saw North and North East Lincolnshire look south, leaving Hull and East Riding to go it alone as an echo of a Humberside county model was silenced.

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It has been revealed that north of the Humber a £400 million fund over 30 years will help drive growth. Up to £15 million in 2024/25 will support transport, flood and coastal erosion programmes across the area, including a coastal regeneration programme in the East Riding. There is also £5 million in 2024/25 to support local economic growth priorities, including any further expansion of Siemens Gamesa’s blade plant at Hull’s Alexandra Dock.

Cllr Anne Handley, leader of East Riding of Yorkshire Council, said: “After months of hard work, I am absolutely thrilled that we can finally say we have a proposed deal and our residents can see what East Yorkshire devolution would really mean to them.

“I have said all along that a Mayoral Combined Authority is absolutely the right way forward for our region, but that it must be the right deal. I am confident we now have the right deal to begin our devolution journey.

“Over time, we will be able to negotiate new deals, as other devolved regions have, ensuring we have more funding and power to make important decisions at a local level and put East Yorkshire in control of its own destiny.”