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Manufacturing

North East is frontrunner in bid for £50m space plant as Lockheed Martin eyes potential sites

A decision is likely to be made this year, the chief executive of Lockheed Martin º£½ÇÊÓÆµ tells BusinessLive

Lockheed Martin's Shetland Space Port

The North East is the frontrunner for a multimillion-pound space manufacturing and research base - with the search already on for potential sites, the man behind the plans has revealed.

A decision could be made this year on whether to bring the Lockheed Martin º£½ÇÊÓÆµ facility to the region.

And while Paul Livingston, chief executive of Lockheed Martin º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, did not rule out other regions for the £50m factory and R&D site he stressed "there's a reason we've come to the North East first."

Read more: Plans to bring the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's first lithium hydroxide plant to Teesside Freeport

The US based firm said it was already looking at a number of undisclosed sites across the region and suggested that, if successful, the region would host the facility in the next few years, potentially leading to 2,300 jobs.

Speaking to BusinessLive at a summit of more than 100 space and aerospace businesses in Newcastle, Mr Livingston said: "It's early days in terms of time lines but I'd think we'd want to be making decisions this year. This isn't something we're thinking might appear in five years time - it'll be a lot sooner than that."

He pointed to Lockheed's £2.4bn spending - even without space investment - in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ last year alone as evidence of the potential value of the project to the North East.

He added: "There's a real reason we've come here first. We think there's an industry here, a heritage, a skills base and we think there are physical facilities as well. We've actually looked at sites in the region so it's not just a speculative look at a map - we've looked at pieces of land.