The Scotsman

Innovation centre scores £9m public funding package

● Glasgow institute awarded five-year funding deal to progress IOT research

- By HANNAH BURLEY hannah.burley@jpress.co.uk

Censis, the centre of excellence for sensing, imaging systems, and the internet of things (IOT), has received a £9.25 million public investment package to continue its work in the technology sector.

The Glasgow-based centre is set to receive £7.3m from the Scottish Funding Council, while Scottish Enterprise will supply £1.7m and Highlands and Islands Enterprise is to provide £250,000 as part of the five-year package.

Censis is targeting an additional £3m in third-party income, ranging from competitiv­e programme calls to contributi­ons from industry, to supplement the public funding.

The investment will be formally announced today by minister for trade, investment and innovation Ivan Mckee during Censis’s annual Technology Summit at Glasgow’s Royal Concert Hall. The event will bring together some 400 delegates and 40 exhibitors from industry and academia.

Ian Reid, chief executive of Censis, said: “This is an incredibly exciting time for Censis and its partners in industry and academia to be involved in innovation in Scotland.

“This funding will allow us to build on the foundation­s set in place over the past five years, with a renewed sector focus on IOT infrastruc­ture; digital manufactur­ing systems; the monitoring of the built and natural environmen­t; and subsea, offshore, and marine activities.

“We’ll also be concentrat­ing our efforts on projects where we can make both an economic and social impact, such as healthcare and independen­t living, the environmen­t and precision agricultur­e.”

During its first five-year phase, Censis brokered 138 projects between industry and academics, worth a combined £17.3m, in sectors ranging from manufactur­ing and subsea to health and life sciences.

Censis also played a key role in the genesis of the £6m Scottish Government-backed project IOT Scotland, as part of a consortium that launched Scotland’s first network in Glasgow in 2016, followed by test beds in Aberdeen, Dundee, Paisley, Orkney, and Inverness.

It has also collaborat­ed with Scotland-based small businesses, such as Fuel Link and Beringar, to help them develop new Iot-based products for global markets.

The news comes in the same week as First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announced £5m funding for Interface, an organisati­on connecting companies with Scotland’s universiti­es, research institutes and colleges, to continue to nurture links between research and innovation and industry.

An Interface review revealed it facilitate­d 196 first-time collaborat­ions between businesses and academic institutio­ns in the past year.

Andrea Nolan, chairwoman of Interface’s strategic board, said: “We have ambitious plans to increase businessac­ademic collaborat­ions and support the developmen­t of long-term partnershi­ps to bring even greater benefits to Scotland’s economy.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom