Burton Mail

Anita blazes a trail as first female chair of R-R in 115-year history

- By BEN LYONS ben.lyons@reachplc.com

ROLLS-ROYCE, which has its civil aerospace and defence division in Derby, has appointed its first female chair in its 115-year history.

The engineerin­g giant, the city’s largest private sector employer, has appointed Anita Frew, who is currently chair of science, technology and chemicals group Croda, based in Snaith, Yorkshire.

She will join the board at Rollsroyce on July 1. Ms Frew succeeds Sir Ian Davis, who is retiring after almost nine years in the role.

Rolls-royce said Ms Frew, 63, emerged as the “outstandin­g candidate” after a comprehens­ive search. She has held board appointmen­ts in the UK and globally for the past 20 years, with recent former roles including deputy chairman and senior independen­t director at Lloyds Banking Group.

Ms Frew also previously worked as a director at advertisin­g group WPP, with its founder Sir Martin Sorrell, and held roles at Royal Bank of Scotland.

Sir Kevin Smith, senior independen­t director at Rolls-royce, said: “Anita brings a wealth of experience from two decades of board appointmen­ts both in the

Her skills and reputation with investors and government institutio­ns will be invaluable.

Sir Kevin Smith

UK and internatio­nally.

“Her skills and reputation with investors and government institutio­ns will be invaluable to the group.”

Sir Ian Davis said: “Rolls-royce is a pioneering company with tremendous potential and it has been a huge privilege and responsibi­lity to be its chairman. I am immensely grateful to my fellow board members for their support and hard work during my tenure as chairman. I wish Anita every success as she joins the board at a very exciting time for Rolls-royce as we deliver a more sustainabl­e agenda.” Warren East, chief executive at Rolls-royce. added: “I would like to thank Ian for his steadfast leadership, guidance and unwavering support during a crucial period for the group, both strategica­lly and operationa­lly.

“Ian has played a key role in contributi­ng to Rolls-royce’s future and on behalf of the executive team and all our employees, I would like to wish him well for the future. I am delighted to welcome Anita to Rolls-royce, with her extensive experience and leadership I look forward to working with her.”

Recently, the firm officially opened the world’s largest indoor aero engine testbed at its aerospace headquarte­rs in Sinfin, costing £90 million. The building, named Testbed 80, has taken three years to build and is said to be the symbol showing Rolls-royce’s long-term commitment to the city of Derby.

Big enough to house an entire football pitch, the building includes a frame so strong that it can hold a large jet engine at full throttle and a tank that can hold 140,000kg of fuel.

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