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Economic Development

Cross-border Western Gateway Partnership in doubt after º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government pulls funding

The Western Gateway Partnership will cease to operate in its current form in June

The Western Gateway Partnership promoted the economies on both sides of the Severn Crossing.(Image: SWNS.com)

The future of the cross-border Western Gateway Partnership, established to champion the economies and investment potential of south Wales and the west of England, is in serious doubt after a º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government decision to pull its £1m core funding.

The partnership supported by local authorities, city regions, businesses, and universities from Pembrokeshire to Swindon, was set up four years ago, partly in response to the growing influence of the Northern Powerhouse, which advocates for greater investment in the north of England.

However, after Chancellor Rachel Reeves first announced plans to end funding for trans-regional partnerships across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, subject to public consultation, in her Budget last autumn, the Westminster Government has now confirmed it is ending its £1m annual commitment to the Western Gateway Partnership, which will cease to operate in its current form from June 6th.

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government’s rationale is that the five pan-regional partnerships impacted have English mayoral combined authorities within their borders that can now take on their roles. However, the Western Gateway Partnership said this failed to take account of its unique cross-border remit and where in south Wales there is no mayoral combined authority.

It said it had attempted to engage with the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government and Minister of State for Local Government and English Devolution, Jim McMahon, on numerous occasions, but had been denied a meeting.

Alongside its core funding from the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government, the partnership has secured around £700,000 in investment and in-kind support in its last year from the private sector and local authorities. It hasn’t received funding from the Welsh Government.

The secretariat of the partnership employs 10. All have received redundancy letters, with a few staff expected to remain until June..

Last week the partnership’s Severn Estuary Commission, which was set up last year to look at how to commercialise clean energy from the Severn Estuary, concluded that the most viable route for harnessing one of the world’s highest tidal ranges in the world, is through a lagoon approach and not a tidal barrage.