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Economic Development

Performance of city and growth deals in Wales questioned by Senedd committee report

The Cardiff Capital Region and Ambition North Wales have hit back at the findings of the report

Chair of the Senedd Economy, Trade and Rural Affairs Committee Andrew RT Davies.(Image: Senedd Cymru)

The performance of growth and city deals in Wales, which over the long-term promise to leverage hundreds of million of pounds in private sector investment and create tens of thousands of new jobs, has been questioned by a Senedd committee.

With joint funding from the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and Welsh governments Wales has two city deals for the Swansea Bay and Cardiff Capital city regions. There is also a growth deal covering the six local authorities of North Wales, under the banner of Ambition North Wales, as well an emerging deal for Mid Wales. The deals for North Wales and the Cardiff Capital Region come under their statutory bodies, via their respective corporate joint committees.

A report from the Senedd’s cross-party Economy, Trade and Rural Affairs Committee says the North Wales Growth Deal is significantly behind target on job creation and leveraged private sector investment It added that the decision of Great British Nuclear not to pursue Trawsfynydd as a site for small modular nuclear reactors has had a major impact, with the project originally accounting for 12.5% of job targets and 40% of investment goals.

Ambition North Wales reported to the committee only 35 jobs created to date and just £1.8m in private sector investment. The committee said it was “disappointed “to learn that Ambition North Wales was having to seek clarity from the Westminster and Cardiff Bay governments on whether they would still receive the full £240m. It calls for the position to be urgently clarified.

In response Ambition North Wales said at the time of giving evidence to the committee in June only one of its projects was operational with six now in delivery. It said that when factoring in construction roles, the number of jobs created and supported is now far higher.

The committee’s report also raises concerns over one of the city deal projects for the Cardiff Capital Region with plans to redevelop the former RWE coal-powered energy plant at Aberthaw in the Vale of Glamorgan.

Earlier this year the city region abandoned its legal defence over how a £30m contract to demolish the former coal-powered station was awarded. The successful legal challenge came from demolition specialist firm Brown and Mason Group, after it lost out in the competitive tendering process to rival Erith, The committee report cites a legal cost incurred by the city region of £5.25m .

However, the total bill, after accounting for legal costs and an independent review by Deloitte into how the procurement process was undertaken by subsidiary city region business, CCR Energy, will be significantly higher . A final figure is expected to be made public in the autumn. The committee said it also has concerns about the scale of funding required for redevelopment of the Aberthaw Power Station, and the impact it could have on public finances.