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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

How BAE Systems is bringing forward the latest defence technology amid a global pandemic

500 working from home and 250 back on site after a brief production pause - Business Live gets a virtual tour of Brough

New measures to work through the coronavirus pandemic at BAE Systems in Brough.(Image: BAE Systems)

Workplaces don’t come much more critical to the country than those focused on defence and security.

Alongside the rich pickings of energy and food on the Humber sits BAE Systems at Brough - where a new normal is dawning David Laister reports.

What do you do when a global pandemic strikes and you have a 750-strong team building Hawk jets and applying design engineering to the next generation air and sea deterrents, Tempest and Dreadnought?

Closing in on 42 years at Brough is Dave Corfield, seven years as site director, and suddenly presented with a challenge like no other.

“On March 24 we temporarily closed the factory, asked all employees to go home while we retained a very small team on site, so we could design a new safe system of work,” he recalled, flipping the calendar back two months.

“We knew we would have to start up manufacturing again, and the $64,000 question was how do you build a Hawk while being 2m away from each other? 

Dave Corfield, site director of BAE Systems at Brough.(Image: BAE Systems)

“The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ government deemed that the work we do is critical to support the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ armed forces and armed forces of our customer governments. Brough employees were classed as key workers. Our aim was to enable as many as possible to work from home - where not possible to establish safe systems for work. It took about three weeks.”

With a legacy stretching back to First World War seaplane testing, it would be a stretch to describe it as unprecedented times, but an effort certainly unseen in this generation in East Yorkshire. A select team from across the workforce set about reimagining the processes that have been followed for as long as the likes of the Hawk - the familiar Red Arrows’ advanced jet trainer aircraft - has been produced. It flew for the first time in 1974.