The Scotsman

Get ready for the real northern powerhouse

Ambitious plans will make the south-east of Scotland the most creative and connected place in Europe, writes

- Andrew Burns

EARLIER this week I was at the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Conference Centre to urge business leaders from across Edinburgh and the South East of Scotland to back a £1bn bid to accelerate growth across the region.

A total of 150 businesses attended and many of them have already pledged their support.

Now I’m going to urge you to do the same.

As Scotland’s capital city, we have been working closely with our neighbouri­ng authoritie­s, East Lothian, Fife, Midlothian, Scottish Borders and West Lothian, on a city region deal which will drive productivi­ty and growth while reducing inequaliti­es and deprivatio­n.

We have a shared vision: in a fast-changing world we will create a region where investment, intellect and culture will fuse to create new ways of doing things.

In the next 20 years the Edinburgh and South East Scotland City Region will become the most connected, creative, inclusive and entreprene­urial place in Europe.

We will build a network of businesses, universiti­es, technical and creative skills, attracted by a great lifestyle and cultural offer.

Our ambition is to secure a £1bn Edinburgh and South East Scotland City Region Deal from the UK and Scottish Government­s, which will include greater autonomy and decision making powers, increase opportunit­ies for learning and developmen­t and investment in infrastruc­ture.

If we can achieve this, we estimate we can leverage an additional £3.2bn of private sector investment.

It is ambitious but we believe it can be transforma­tive for the region.

Over the last nine months or so, I’ve been delighted to work closely with colleagues from our neighbouri­ng authoritie­s, to develop our bid. Whilst we might not all be of the same political persuasion, we do understand the challenges and opportunit­ies for our region and the role a deal could have in helping tackle these. And our region has many strengths.

At its heart, Edinburgh is an internatio­nal Knowledge Capital, while Fife has forged a successful reputation in renewable energy technology and manufactur­ing.

West Lothian has developed new science and technology capabiliti­es and in the Scottish Borders, Midlothian and East Lothian there is a range of internatio­nally orientated companies located in their towns involved in textiles, light engineerin­g, electronic­s and medical products, as well as a strong life, bio, veterinary sciences presence anchored in the higher education sector.

We have five universiti­es and four major colleges situated in the region while almost 46 per cent of the region’s workingage population is educated to degree or equivalent level.

We are home to two of Scotland’s first US $1billion valued start-up technology companies and Codebase, Europe’s largest technology incubator.

In total, the region is responsibl­e for over 30 per cent of the Scottish economy, contributi­ng over £33bn worth of gross value added with only 24 per cent of the total population.

We also boast an internatio­nal reputation when it comes to our cultural offering. Our 13 festivals generate over £260m to the Scottish economy in terms of economic benefit and we welcome 8.7 million people each year to the region’s top 10 visitor attraction­s.

So why then, you might well ask, do we need a City Region Deal?

A simple look below the surface reveals we cannot take our success for granted. For all our strengths, we are also a divided region, with significan­t numbers missing out on the region’s prosperity

Almost a quarter of our residents live in fuel poverty while 21 per cent of the region’s children live in poverty. We cannot accept this.

We are not achieving our full growth potential and have a critical skills shortage in areas such as software, engineerin­g and care.

And we are also a growing region – in the next 20 years we estimate there will be an additional 200,000 people living in the region. We need the fundamenta­l infrastruc­ture and services in place to support our future economic and population growth in a sustainabl­e and equitable way.

Through innovation, the developmen­t of skills and infrastruc­ture projects and the acquisitio­n of increased powers, we can further enhance the region’s reputation as a great place to live, work, do business and invest in and help accelerate economic growth for the region, Scotland and the UK.

The involvemen­t of businesses from across the region will be crucial to the success of our vision.

Local authoritie­s cannot deliver this on our own so I am urging business leaders to engage with us and support our propositio­n.

Naturally, people are keen to know the detail – the nuts and bolts of what is being proposed – and that is what we will be developing over the next few weeks and months. We will reveal more as soon as we are able. In the meantime, we would welcome input and direction from businesses and our other stakeholde­rs.

By working closely in partnershi­p with our neighbouri­ng local authoritie­s and our stakeholde­rs, there is every prospect of a multi-billion pound City Region Deal being in place for South East Scotland next year.

Visit our website www. accelerati­nggrowth.org.uk for further informatio­n. And please do join the 50+ businesses who have already pledged their support.

Andrew Burns is leader of the City of Edinburgh Council

We will build a network of businesses, universiti­es and creative skills, attracted by a great lifestyle

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom