Durham NETPark and Blyth Energy Central get £17m boost in push for hundreds of new jobs
Two major industrial sites in Northumberland and County Durham are set for a multi-million pound cash injection.
Sedgefield’s NETPark and the Energy Central campus in Blyth have been awarded a combined £16.8 million, under efforts to create thousands of new jobs across the region. Funding was signed off by the North East Combined Authority (NECA) on Tuesday, as part of the region’s Investment Zone – a flagship £160 million programme that it is hoped will create at least 4,000 jobs and secure £3 billion of private sector investment over the next decade.
Regional leaders agreed at a meeting in Morpeth on Tuesday to put £11.3 million into works to help unlock the next phase of development at the NETPark science and tech hub, including the remediation of land, grid connections and road building. A NECA report reveals that a “nationally significant inward investor” is interested in moving into the site and could create more than 250 highly-skilled jobs – an opportunity that it is feared “would be lost” without public investment to speed up the development.
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And in Blyth, £5.5 million will be granted for the building of a planned Energy Central Institute, a higher education research and skills centre that will develop expertise in the energy sector and be a “focal point” for partnerships the area’s energy businesses, universities and the Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult (OREC). NECA said that the money would complete the funding package for the scheme, to be built on the site of the former Keel Row shopping centre in Blyth town centre.
Over the initial five years of the project, the facility is expected to deliver specialist training and research help to 90 businesses and will support 260 learners per year. North East mayor Kim McGuinness hailed the plans as a "substantial investment” in the offshore wind and advanced manufacturing industries.
She added: “The North East is a manufacturing powerhouse, with a proud heritage, and our investments are unlocking jobs and training for local people in the industries of the future. From battery technology to green energy, we're playing a leading role in the creating prosperity and opportunity for our region and nation - whilst ensuring people in the North East can enjoy a well-paid job where they live, rather than leaving us to secure decent work.”
Funding from the Investment Zone was also provided to the Nissan-led MADE NE scheme in Sunderland, which focuses on electric vehicle and battery technology. Northumberland County Council leader Glen Sanderson called the investments “sensational” for the future of the North East.
Sunderland Council leader Michael Mordey, who leads on finance and investment issues in the NECA cabinet, added: “These are exciting times for the North East. Advanced manufacturing and green industries include some of the fastest growing industries globally and we have real strengths in electric vehicle and battery production, offshore and renewable energy alongside space and satellite technologies here in the region.
“This investment in the critical infrastructure and enabling works as well as in specialist training - and most importantly the job creation this will lead to – will continue to place the North East firmly on the map as the destination of choice for key investments from companies of all sizes seeking to set up home or expand operations in the region in these key sectors.”