º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

North East deals of the week: key acquisitions, contracts and investments

Companies featuring in this week's round-up include TechnipFM, whyaye, Wastefront, Sage, Impact Recycling and Castle View Group

Maureen Robson Norman, CEO of whyaye, outside The Toffee Factory.(Image: Chris Booth/whyaye)

Growing Newcastle tech firm whyaye ltd has been snapped up by EY as part of the global accounting giant’s investment in consulting services.

Based in the Toffee Factory in Ouseburn, whyaye was founded by Maureen Robson Norman, Anna Bisset and Lisa Smith, who met while working on a Royal Bank of Scotland project in 2014, to bring a new approach to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ consultancy landscape. The company last year expanded from Hoults Yard into the bigger base in Ouseburn, having taken on new staff in tandem with growing numbers of new clients.

The company is a consulting services provider for the ServiceNow platform, which combines business data and processes into one services management solution. In the last year, whyaye has seen staff numbers increase from around 60 to more than 100 employees across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ. EY has acquired the business for an undisclosed sum as part of ongoing investments in technology consulting services, and the company is the eighth EY acquisition in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ since April 2021.

Read more: People on the move: key North East appointments and promotions

Maureen Robson-Norman, CEO of whyaye, said: “This is an important milestone for whyaye and we’re excited to be part of the EY organisation. ServiceNow is an incredibly powerful platform which can help bring significant efficiencies to a business when used to its full potential. We’re looking forward to working collaboratively with EY teams to accelerate our growth and work with clients on their transformation journeys.”

Technip's base in Walker on the banks of the River Tyne(Image: Newcastle Chronicle)

Subsea cable specialist specialist TechnipFMC secured a deal worth more than $1bn for a major project in Brazil which will bring work to its North East yard.

The company, which has its head office and main º£½ÇÊÓÆµ yard in Walker, Newcastle, as well as operations in the US, France, Brazil and Malaysia, designs and manufactures cable and flexible pipes for use in offshore markets. The firm’s base on the River Tyne is the main centre of expertise for marketing, research and development, engineering, project management and manufacturing of umbilical systems in the Technip group.

Now company has announced it has been awarded a major contract for an integrated engineering, procurement, construction and installation project by Equinor Energy do Brasil Ltda, a subsidiary of Equinor ASA (Equinor). The award follows the conclusion of a study of the BM-C-33 field offshore Brazil, which is in waters of up to 2,900m deep.