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PRIVACY
Tech

£12m innovation boost for North West shipping, nuclear and cybersecurity

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council investing £22m in º£½ÇÊÓÆµ research clusters

A Spot autonomous robot deployed by the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority(Image: United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority)

Three North West innovation clusters have won millions of Government cash to boost businesses and universities in areas from nuclear robotics to cybersecurity and maritime decarbonisation.

The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) is investing £22m in seven “research and innovation clusters” across the nations and regions of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

Two of the projects are rooted in the North West, with a third designed to connect the nuclear legacies of Cumbria and Oxfordshire.

The CyberFocus project , led by Prof Daniel Prince at Lancaster University, has secured £4.9m in EPSRC funding. It aims to “fuel the socio-economic potential of the North West cyber sector to ensure that the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ remains at the forefront of cutting-edge cyber security”. It brings together universities, businesses and public sector bodies across Greater Manchester, Merseyside, Lancashire and Cumbria.

The EPSRC added: “The project benefits from the arrival of Government Communications Headquarters in Manchester and the imminent arrival of the National Cyber Force in Lancashire. It will foster cross-cluster collaborations with other regional specialisms in aerospace, defence, nuclear and manufacturing.”

The project aims to create 85 new collaborative partnerships, develop 400 new products, processes or services, secure an extra £40m in funding for the North West, and to train 300 people in cyber innovation skills.

The Maritime and Last Mile Net Zero (MaLaMi) project , led by Prof Zaili Yang at Liverpool John Moores University with other university and public sector partners, aims to accelerate maritime transport decarbonisation and grow low-carbon logistics in Liverpool City Region and across the shipping corridor to Belfast.

The maritime economy contributes some £800m in gross value added (GVA) to Liverpool City Region annually, handling 45% of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ trade from North America.