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Economic Development

North East areas identified among º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's net-zero jobs 'hot spots'

The green economy is supporting nearly 20,000 jobs and worth more than £2bn to the regional economy, the CBI report says

Wind turbines in Northumberland(Image: Newcastle Chronicle)

Two parts of the North East have been singled out as “net zero hot spots” in a report which highlights how green industries are already contributing thousands of jobs to the local economy.

The CBI report, compiled in association with the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU), found that there are nearly 20,000 jobs in the Tyneside and Teesside coast and the Scottish Borders and Northumberland areas, amounting to around 4% of jobs in those areas and contributing more than £2bn to the economy.

But the release of the report – which comes just a few weeks after plans for a 3,000-job battery gigafactory in Northumberland fell apart – has come with a warning that Government support is needed to help ambitious schemes come to fruition.

Read more: North East devolution deal is signed

New polling by YouGov released alongside the analysis has found that people in the Tyneside and Teesside area see renewable energy and clean technology as the sector most likely to create long-term growth in the local economy, but also that it is the sector the Government should prioritise support for to generate more growth in the area.

Tom Thackray, director of decarbonisation at the CBI said: “Upping the pace on the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s transition to net zero will challenge industries, businesses, and policymakers in the years ahead. This report underlines the real benefit to firms across multiple sectors – right across the country – of embracing that challenge.

“We can see how environmentally sustainable economic growth – for example, the development and scaling of renewable energy – will help stimulate economic activity across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and in turn help to reduce regional inequality. And while it is a challenge that businesses need to embrace, green growth is also one of the big opportunities in the coming years for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy.”

Peter Chalkley, director of ECIU, said: “From insulation fitters to heat pump engineers and agritech pioneers, businesses in the net zero economy are adding £70bn to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy. Billions of pounds of private sector investments are being made in net zero with the hot spots of activity being outside of London in places like Tyneside, Merseyside and Derbyshire.