Shropshire Star

Work begins on Newport Innovation Park

Work has begun on building the infrastructure for the Newport Innovation Park - which will ultimately support the creation of up to 950 jobs.

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Mandy Thorn, chair of the Marches Local Enterprise Partnership, Councillor Lee Carter, Telford & Wrekin Council’s cabinet member for Borough Economy, Councillor Peter Scott, mayor of Newport, Councillor David Wright, Telford & Wrekin Council’s cabinet member for housing. Clare Keegan, Harper Adams University’s business development manager and David Charmbury, senior development manager of Homes England

Councillors and stakeholders cut the first ground on the major project this afternoon.

The Ni-Park is a key element in the Newport Innovation and Enterprise Package, which secured £6.36m funding from the Marches Local Enterprise Partnership under the Local Growth Fund, matched by investment from Telford & Wrekin Council.

Works at Ni-Park are being delivered by infrastructure group Balfour Beatty.

Telford & Wrekin Council said the project will provide a significant economic boost to Newport and the local area.

It said the continued development of Harper Adams University, with its successful agri-tech research programme and agri-engineering and precision farming centre for innovation, has created an opportunity to bring high value jobs to Newport through the creation of a cluster of high tech businesses on the new innovation sites.

Councillor Lee Carter, Telford & Wrekin Council’s cabinet member for Borough Economy, said: “Ni-Park is set to put Telford and the UK at the forefront of high efficiency agriculture and I am delighted that work is about to begin.

“It will bring together agricultural and technical companies enabling industry experts to collaborate on and commercialise new technologies.

“Ni-Park will pioneer an epicenter of global intelligence, drive growth and support innovation to help farmers and businesses achieve sustainable productivity in agriculture and farming.”

Delighted

Mandy Thorn, chair of the Marches Local Enterprise Partnership, said: “Ni-Park is a LEP supported project which will really put our region on the map.

“Not only is it a flagship development in the agri-tech sector nationally, it has tangible benefits for our businesses and our regional economic growth.

“We are committed to funding schemes that deliver the creation of sustainable jobs and this investment will do exactly that.”

Dr David Llewellyn, vice-chancellor of Harper Adams University, said: “We will be supporting the local authority to create an ecosystem for agri-tech innovation at Ni-Park that will build upon ground-breaking research conducted by the university.

“This includes the world-leading Hands Free Hectare experiment, which has now been extended to a farm-scale project that will run for the next three years and the recent launch of our Global Institute for Agri-Tech Economics, which is improving our understanding of new food production methods.

“There is considerable interest worldwide in improving productivity in the various ways in which we provide our food.

“This collaboration will enable industry and academia to find the right solutions to not only develop future food production systems, but also to find ways in which those systems can protect our natural resources, improve biodiversity and help us all in the challenge of tackling climate change.”

Jon Kiteley, Balfour Beatty’s area director for north and Midlands, said: “We are delighted to be continuing our partnership with Telford & Wrekin Council at the Newport Innovation Park project.

“Our team of expert engineers are perfectly positioned to deliver this scheme which will enable the development of a new employment area for the local community. We will also utilize a local supply chain throughout construction to support the local economy in Newport.”