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Enterprise

The South West companies to watch in 2023

As we head into the new year, we take a look at 11 businesses from the region we think are worth keeping an eye on over the next 12 months

Dyson's new air-purifying headphones.(Image: Dyson)

As South West chamber of commerce Business West recently put it, 2022 was “a very tough year” for businesses.

More than half of the leaders of 350 companies in the region that took part in a survey for the Bristol-based chamber said they had been impacted in the last quarter by the political and economic instability that defined much of the previous 12 months.

While the likes of KPMG and the British Chambers of Commerce have forecast the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy to remain in a shallow and protracted recession throughout 2023, firms across the land - including in the South West - will be looking to push on with their exciting, innovative plans as best they can.

In the face of 40-year-high inflation, political turmoil in Westminster, the energy crisis and the economic reverberations form the war in Ukraine and Covid-19, there were still a plethora of companies that achieved incredible things last year in the South West, and are planning for even more success in 2023.

Here is a look at a selection of 11 we have picked out who we feel you should keep an eye on over the next 12 months.

Peequal, Bristol

Hazel and Amber are the creators of Peequal(Image: Charlie Mays)

Two Bristol University graduates may have found a solution for a long-standing problem that has blighted women’s enjoyment of festivals and other large events. Peequal, founded by Amber Probyn and Hazel McShane, has developed flatpack, portable women’s urinals, which it says are six times faster to use and produce 98% less carbon than traditional portable toilets.

The company has toured º£½ÇÊÓÆµ festivals, gaining user feedback and tweaking their product, since its founders graduated in 2021. Peequal is hoping its urinals, which are made of recycled sea plastics, will become a common sight at large music events, with 250 units currently under construction and several deals being signed with large-scale festival operators.

Last month the company posted a picture of Ms Probyn and Ms McShane at the Glastonbury Festival site on Worthy Farm in Somerset, where it said they had held “some very exciting conversations”.