º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

Welsh-speaking counties to get £11m fund to boost economic prosperity

The financial package will be available over the next three years to four counties which have the highest levels of Welsh speakers

Economy Minister Vaughan Gethin, Gruffydd Rees, owner of Gwenyn Gruffydd, and Cefin Campbell, Designated Member at Yr Egin in Carmarthen

An £11m funding package has been launched in a bid to boost economic prosperity in predominantly Welsh-speaking counties.

The funding will be available over the next three years to four counties which have the highest levels of Welsh speakers: Gwynedd, Ynys Môn, Ceredigion and Carmarthenshire.

Under the Welsh Government's Arfor 2 programme and as part of the cooperation agreement with Plaid Cymru, the funding will be delivered through a number of interventions including supporting commercial and community enterprises that aim to preserve and increase local wealth.

Read more: The story of Wales’ own oil company and plans to go green

The financial package will also aim to encourage young people under 35 to stay or return to their home communities by engaging in enterprise or developing a career.

It will also play a role in the devolved government's Welsh language strategy of 1m Welsh speakers 2050.

Economy Minister Vaughan Gething said: “I am pleased that through collaborative working with local authorities and with Plaid Cymru, we have reached agreement on a strategic programme of interventions for Arfor 2 which has potential to make a significant difference in our Welsh speaking heartlands taking forward our ambitions of spreading economic prosperity. By working with our Local Authority partners, we want to support communities that are strongholds of the Welsh language to flourish through economic interventions and contribute to increasing opportunities to see and use the Welsh language on a daily basis.”

Designated member Cefin Campbell said: “By working together we are building on the successes of the Arfor pilot which aims to support and grow the local economy and the Welsh language together. The investment of £11m in this scheme is a direct boost to the economies of the west that will further promote entrepreneurship, business growth and help protect the Welsh language. We want to make sure communities in these areas can thrive and people are able to stay in their local communities for work or to grow a business.”