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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Welsh Government confident of major boost from International Investment Summit

The summit will be held at the ICC Wales next week

Eluned Morgan.(Image: WalesOnline/Rob Browne)

The Welsh Government is hopeful that its International Investment Summit next week will result in significant investment outcomes, particularly from investors and companies currently not active in Wales.

The summit, the brainchild of First Minister Eluned Morgan, will be staged at the ICC Wales in Newport on Monday. Recently agreed investment projects in Wales, but yet to be made public, will be announced to give the event added impetus.

Of the 250 firms attending – which, as well as individual firms, also include investors such as private equity and pension funds with billions in deployable capital – 60% (150) are currently not active in the Welsh marketplace. In total, the summit will be attended by more than 1,500 delegates.

While the Welsh Government has produced a prospectus of investable projects across Wales, including the Global Centre of Rail Excellence (GCRE) in the Dulais Valley and the £450m planned Advanced Radioisotope Technology for Health Utility Reactor – a facility designed to secure the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s long-term supply of medical radioisotopes – officials in breakout rooms will be on hand to capture any other investment opportunities. However, opportunities seeded at the summit could take a number of years to be realised as job-creating live projects.

Many of the investable opportunities being pitched by the Welsh Government are already in the marketplace. While the GCRE, which would be the world’s first integrated testing facility for both trains and rail infrastructure, has attracted interest from the private sector, they are not willing to commit at the required level, leaving the Welsh Government, as it stands, facing having to plough more of its own funding into it.

The summit will offer an opportunity – and, while already on the marketplace, again – to attract investment in energy and data centres on the 500-hectare site, for which land deals could help close the current funding gap for the £400m project.


Also promoted will be property investment opportunities in Swansea and for next phases of the Pentre Awel scheme in Llanelli. A prime undeveloped land site on the south side of the Callaghan Square office scheme in the centre of Cardiff will also be promoted to potential investors. There is an element of irony here, as the Welsh Government acquired the land from developer MEPC well over a decade ago on the rationale that they were better placed to bring investment forward.

The site could see a mixture of new office, residential, leisure and retail space. Its attractiveness to potential developers is expected to be boosted by inclusion in a new investment zone covering Cardiff and Newport. The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government-backed zone is expected to secure £160m of support to attract investment over the next decade. It will be run by the Cardiff Capital Region.