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PRIVACY
Economic Development

First Minister said Wales Investment Summit has delivered major economic boost

She said a closer alignment with the EU's single market would further boost the Welsh economy

Eluned Morgan addressing the Wales Investment Siummit.

Eluned Morgan said one of her first decisions as First Minister to stage the Wales Investment Summit had focused minds to get £16bn of investment projects away ahead of the event.

The summit, held at ICC Wales in Newport attracted 300 companies and investors from 32 different countries, around 60% of whom are not currently invested in Wales..

The biggest single investment is a network of new AI data centres in south Wales from US venture Vantage Data Centers. The £10bn investment will create 5,000 jobs, although the majority will be construction-related.

Other announcements include:

  • A £600m investment from Vodafone, which will bring its standalone 5G coverage in Wales to 99% and reach two million more people.

  • GE is investing £18m to modernise its aerospace engine testing facility at Nantgarw, which employs around 1,350 highly skilled engineers and technical specialists.

  • Associated British Ports is investing £42m in five Welsh ports, including a new deep-water berth at Middle Quay, Newport.

  • RWE is investing £200m in its largest battery-energy-storage facility in Pembroke, helping to stabilise the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ energy market by storing surplus energy and feeding it into the National Grid.

  • Eni is committing £700m to a carbon-capture and storage project at the former Point of Ayr colliery site in Flintshire, creating more than 1,000 jobs.

  • Bad Wolf, the Cardiff-based TV and film production company, is investing £2m in two new high-end productions expected to generate £30m in direct, indirect, and induced impact for the Welsh economy, creating 300 freelance roles.

Vantage, which already has a data-centre campus in Cardiff, will also create new data centres at the former Ford engine plant in Bridgend and at the Welsh Government-owned Bro Tathan business park in the Vale of Glamorgan.

There will also be further projects, seeded through interactions between delegates, that could take years to come to fruition.

While the £16bn of projects would likely have happened anyway, the First Minister insisted that staging the summit had brought focus to getting deals over the line.

She said: “This is not the beginning of the journey - that started a year ago. We have been working with these companies, holding their hands for a whole year to get them to a place where they can make these major announcements today.