º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Could opportunities in outer space bring jobs to the North East?

A new group to develop the North East space sector has been set up

Lockheed Martin is reviewing potential sites in the North East for a £50m space manufacturing and research and development facility(Image: Supplied by Lockheed Martin)

This week saw the possibility of 2,300 jobs being created in the North East as global defence giant Lockheed Martin identified the region as the frontrunner for a £50m manufacturing and research base.

The potential plans were unveiled at a conference in Newcastle looking at economic opportunities in the space sector, which attracted more than 100 North East companies.

Though no deal has been signed, the US firm has already been scoping out potential sites and said: “there’s a reason we’ve come to the North East first”.

Read more: go here for more North East business news

The North East has previously made efforts to capitalise on some of those opportunities by opening a Space Enterprise Lab linked to the Satellite Applications Catapult at the NETPark science and business park in Sedgefield, County Durham.

Now a North East Space Leadership Group has been newly formed to shape the vision, mission and strategy for the growing space sector in the region.

Made up of a diverse range of professionals from industry, universities, the public sector, politics and the Government, the group aims to support the development of the space cluster in the North East with a focus on nurturing business growth and employment opportunities.

That aims echoes the Government’s ambitions for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to capture a significant chunk of the estimated £490bn global space market, and the Leadership Group will meet four times a year in a bid to keep the North East at the front of that drive.