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Manufacturing

Big interview: How Leonardo Helicopters' new º£½ÇÊÓÆµ boss is planning to transform a century-old business

Adam Clarke talks to BusinessLive about his vision for the historic Somerset firm, including investment in new technologies, dealing with the cost-of-living crisis and plans to 'evolve' the culture to attract top talent

Adam Clarke, managing director of Leonardo Helicopters º£½ÇÊÓÆµ(Image: © Leonardo S.p.A. and subsidiaries)

Think of Somerset and it’s likely cheddar cheese, rolling hills and cider may spring to mind. Helicopters are probably not high up on the list. But the West Country county, arguably most famed as the home of Glastonbury Festival, is an important º£½ÇÊÓÆµ hub for aerospace. The sector contributes hundreds of millions of pounds to the local economy every year and generates thousands of jobs.

In fact, Somerset’s links with the industry stretch back more than a 100 years. A 1986 flight over the Somerset Levels by test pilot Trevor Egginton in a modified Westland Lynx still holds the Federation Aeronautique Internationale world record for fastest helicopter flight. He achieved a speed of 249 miles per hour (400 kilometres per hour) over a 15-mile course.

In 1915, the Westland Aircraft Works in Yeovil was ordered by the government to produce seaplanes for the First World War, which were moved by horse-drawn cart and rail to the Solent, ready for assembly and testing.

More than a century on and Leonardo Helicopters º£½ÇÊÓÆµ - as the company is now called - still has a vast site in the town, employing thousands of people. The facility is the only place in Britain that still carries out the end-to-end design, development and manufacturing of helicopters.

More than 3,100 staff are based on site, including contractors and 150 trainee graduates and apprentices, who work across departments including planning, engineering, research and innovation, air traffic control, aviation operations, electrical manufacturing and flight safety (among others).

The business, which is part of Italian multinational aerospace and defence firm Leonardo, mainly produces aircraft for the British military - the MoD is the company’s most important customer - as well as for civil use including search and rescue, law enforcement and privately owned helicopters. The helicopters take anything from between 18 months and three years to build, with each one having a multimillion-pound price tag

Managing the smooth running and future growth of such a huge operation is no mean feat - but Leonardo Helicopter º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s new managing director is determined to do just that. Adam Clarke has been in post just nine months and is quietly confident he will be able to help Leonardo evolve.

“I have a number of visions but ultimately the goal is to continue to grow this business and allow it to flourish as it once did in the past,” he said. “The reason I am here is to take this business in a new direction of travel. We are working on new novel technologies which will take this business to something different in the future, so it is a sustainable business that will be here in another 100 years' time.”