Western Morning News (Saturday)

Shipbuildi­ng boost ‘will benefit yards in the West’

- WMN REPORTER wmnnewsdes­k@reachplc.com

AMULTIBILLION pound injection into UK regional shipbuildi­ng will create tens of thousands of jobs, including many in the South West, and deliver more than 150 new naval and civil vessels over the next 30 years, the Government has said.

The investment, announced by the Prime Minister during a visit to a Merseyside dockyard on Thursday, will “galvanise” shipyards and suppliers across the country, Downing Street said. The £4 billion fund for the new vessels was announced in the 2020 Spending review and the 2021 Autumn Budget.

Meanwhile, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) is set to publish its refreshed National Shipbuildi­ng Strategy (NSbS). This will outline how the Government plans to support shipyards across the nation to upskill workers, create jobs, drive technology developmen­t, and ensure the industry “delivers on nextgenera­tion challenges”, Downing Street said.

It said the strategy will also build upon the nation’s “increased support for European defence capability in the face of rising Russian aggression”, with British defence firm Babcock, the owner of Devonport Dockyard, chosen as Poland’s preferred partner to deliver three new warships based on the UK’s Type 31 design.

Mr Johnson said shipbuildi­ng had been “in our blood for centuries”, and it should remain “at the heart of British industry of generation­s to come”.

“The National Shipbuildi­ng Strategy will transform this important and crucial industry, creating jobs, driving technology developmen­t and upskilling the shipbuilde­rs of tomorrow, ensuring we are levelling up across every dock, port and shipyard in the UK,” he said.

“This will ensure the UK is rightly seen as a shipbuildi­ng power across the world.”

As part of the strategy, the Department for Transport will invest £6 million in the UK Shipping Office for Reducing Emissions (UK-Shore).

This will be used to “match fund research and developmen­t in zero emission vessels and infrastruc­ture and ensure our place as global leader in green technology”, No 10 said.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said: “As shipbuildi­ng tsar, I am proud to be announcing our new strategy, this is an exciting time to be involved in the sector. With significan­t Government investment, we will be levelling up across our shipbuildi­ng, workforce, from shipyard to supplier, from procuremen­t to designer, creating tens of thousands of new employment opportunit­ies, boosting living standards and pay.

“Our refreshed strategy will see the sector galvanised at a crucial time for our economy and see a vital part of British industry expand and flourish.”

Chris Evans, Labour’s shadow defence procuremen­t minister, said “ministers are failing to ensure ships are built in the UK and to secure local jobs”.

“One in five ships have disappeare­d from our surface fleet since 2010 and, while a 30-year pipeline for industry is welcome, this strategy does not address the MoD’s deep-seated issues which mean none of its major shipbuildi­ng programmes are on time or on budget,” he said.

“With growing threats and Russian aggression, our steel industry and shipyards are essential to national security.” He said Labour was committed to building resilience in UK supply chains.

 ?? Ben Birchall/Press Associatio­n ?? Prime Minister Boris Johnson helps contractor Sam Evans, 20, to paint machinery yellow during a visit to Appledore Shipyard in Devon in 2020
Ben Birchall/Press Associatio­n Prime Minister Boris Johnson helps contractor Sam Evans, 20, to paint machinery yellow during a visit to Appledore Shipyard in Devon in 2020

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