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PRIVACY
Opinion

What will Eluned Morgan's investment summit deliver

The summit will take place at the ICC Wales on December 1st

(Image: WalesOnline/Rob Browne)

In around five weeks, the First Minister will host her much-vaunted international investment summit at the ICC Wales in Newport.

Who is attending and what projects will be pitched as investment-ready, has yet to be made public.

However, the First Minister has rightly decided to keep it a small and focused affair for a summit that will attract a number of investors not currently active in Wales (around 60% of attendees). Little would be gained from inviting familiar faces from ‘Team Wales.’

But what does Wales have that could offer prospective investors returns that would match or outperform investing in other asset classes?

If you look at what is investable in Wales - and firms seeking growth capital can easily fund investors with capital to deploy - how many projects have planning approval and are of significant scale to attract collectively billions in investment?

This will be the challenge for the First Minister and her officials. Just identifying, say, property investment opportunities in Swansea and Cardiff will hardly set the summit alight - besides, these types of opportunities are already well signposted.

While there are no direct returns from investing in rail, there could be a pitch made for investment around new stations and existing ones as part of the £1bn Valley Lines electrification project. The added value from the Metro should be around new housing, office, retail, or leisure developments in close proximity to stations benefitting from turn-up-and-go train services. Perhaps a trick has been missed by not establishing a sort of Metro development company to have already highlighted such opportunities.

While the Global Centre of Rail Excellence project planned for the Dulais Valley has attracted interest from the private sector, they are not willing to commit at the required level, leaving the Welsh Government, as it stands, facing having to plough more of its own funding into it. The summit will offer an opportunity - and while again already on the marketplace - to attract investment in energy and data centres on the 500-hectare site, for which land deals could help close the current funding gap for the £400m project.