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Economic Development

Second bid for levelling up cash to support Tyne offshore and subsea sectors

Newcastle City Council wants the money for projects it says are key to safeguarding the future of the burgeoning sector

Smulders yard at Wallsend(Image: Newcastle Chronicle)

A second bid to secure multimillion-pound funding for the Tyneside offshore and subsea sector has been sent to the Government.

Newcastle City Council is bidding for £19.3m from the second round of the Government’s Levelling Up Fund after missing out on funding with its original bid in the first round last October. It says the funding would safeguard thousands of jobs, help to attract investment and secure the long-term future of the Tyne’s offshore and subsea sector.

Companies in the sector currently employ around 2,800 people and contribute £139m to the regional economy each year. It is hoped that a successful funding bid would help attract further inward investment and job creation as the renewables sector becomes a key growth area in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy.

Read more : offshore wind hope for North East

Coun Alex Hay, cabinet member for a resilient city at Newcastle City Council, said: “We are urging the Government to recognise the importance of the River Tyne for our local economy and the need for such investment to increase our productivity and level up with the rest of the country. The specialist industries that operate on the banks of the Tyne provide thousands of jobs for local people and there is a huge amount of potential for further growth.

“We need to be able to unlock that potential so that these riverside operations can continue to thrive here in the North East, supporting a stronger regional economy and creating more jobs and training opportunities for our communities.”

The second-round bid is supported by Newcastle East MP Nick Brown, who also backed the original bid last year.

He said: “This project complements the environmental protection work that the council, along with the Environment Agency, are already undertaking upstream. It helps safeguard the marine environment from contaminants, this in turn helps protect and develop green jobs on the north bank of the Tyne.”