Government launches Innovation Strategy | The Engineer The Engineer

The government has announced its Innovation Strategy, an effort that will pump £22bn into R&D and create conditions for private sector investment into innovation.

Launched today (July 22, 2021) by business secretary Kwasi Kwarteng, the Innovation Strategy is the government’s long-term vision to put innovation at the heart of ‘building back better’. Innovate UK and UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) have been tasked with putting the Strategy into operation.

The UK will increase annual public investment on R&D to £22bn, but BEIS state that the private sector will have a key role in boosting spending on R&D to target domestic priorities including tackling climate change and boosting productivity.

“With businesses responsible for the majority of innovation and R&D done in the UK it is welcome, and somewhat refreshing, to have a strategy so focused on the objective of boosting innovation by private sector firms,” commented Prof Sir Jim McDonald FREng, President, RAEng. “With pressures on public finances, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on businesses, and growing global competition, supporting businesses to manage the risks associated with R&D and encourage innovation is a way of securing our future growth and reaping the returns from our investment in research.

According to BEIS, the strategy takes lessons learned from the pandemic, including from the UK’s Vaccine Taskforce, and will apply them find solutions to challenges facing the UK, including the relative decline in business R&D investment, skills gaps and the need for pro-enterprise regulatory environment.

BEIS add that government will ‘specify ‘innovation missions’ that set clear direction, urgency and pace on the issues confronting the UK that can be tackled with the private sector.’ These will be determined by the new National Science and Technology Council and supported by the Office for Science and Technology Strategy.

The government is also outlining seven strategic technologies to prioritise and build on existing R&D strengths, including clean technologies, robotics, genomics and AI.

In a statement, business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng said: “We have not always turned our genius for innovation into jobs and companies here in Britain.

“Through this long-term plan, we want to rekindle our country’s flame of innovation and discovery, helping businesses to seize the vast opportunities that innovation can bring.

“If we get this right, we can build the foundations for the new industries of tomorrow, and ensure British firms are at the front of the pack to turn world-leading science into new products and services that are successful in international markets.”

Advanced materials and manufacturing; AI, digital and advanced computing; bioinformatics and genomics; engineering biology; electronics, photonics and quantum; energy and environment technologies; robotics and smart machines are identified by government as areas in which the UK has globally competitive R&D and industrial strength.

As part of efforts to ensure innovative business across the UK can capitalise on these strengths, five projects will receive a share of £127m through the Strength in Places Fund, delivered by UKRI. Of these, £22.6m will help the Advanced Machinery & Productivity Initiative in northern England to drive innovation for the UK’s advanced machinery manufacturers.

Commenting on today’s announcement, Dr Clive Hickman, chief executive of the Manufacturing Technology Centre, said: “At the Manufacturing Technology Centre, we know that early investment in tomorrow’s skills, processes and technologies is critical to future-proofing the country’s economy, and empowering us to compete and trade internationally.

“To realise the strategy’s full potential, and to support our best innovators’ ideas, the UK will need accommodating policies that encourage inventors and researchers to be bold, and which fuel investment in research.

“The government’s commitment to increasing public investment in R&D to a record £22bn will play a key part in this, but its proposed changes in how we support and develop transformational technology through education, regulation and procurement will also be vital.”

Innovation Strategy 10-point plan:

Source: BEIS