CGI of West Midlands Gigafactory
A detailed plan for the delivery of a West Midlands Investment Zone capable of attracting more than £5.5bn of private investment and over 30,000 new jobs has been given the green light today.
The West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA) Board has agreed a delivery plan that will combine a mix of tax incentives, direct funding and business rate retention for the zone.
The plan is focused on driving growth in advanced manufacturing, green industries, health-tech and underlying digital technologies.
The Investment Zone itself will cover the whole West Midlands but will be powered through three specific sites with bespoke funding and incentives for businesses who set up there.
The three sites are:
Laura Shoaf, WMCA chief executive, said: “The Investment Zone is already attracting significant private sector investment and following the deployment of this delivery plan will have the potential to attract billions of pounds more as well as tens of thousands of new jobs.
“Those jobs are key because this investment zone needs to be as much about people as it is about business. That’s why our delivery plan includes a comprehensive skills programme so local people can get the jobs being created, especially those in the new technology-based and green industries.
“At the heart of our plan, which could not have been put together without the invaluable support of our local councils, universities and private sector, is the need for this zone to bring inclusive economic growth to every corner of our region. We believe the zone can do that by driving forward the technology based, low carbon industries of the future while attracting top companies from around the world.”
In approving the plan for delivering the zone over the first year, the Board was told that in getting development underway quickly, there was the potential to retain around £1.5bn of business rates over the zone’s 25-year lifespan – money that can be reinvested into the region instead of going back into government coffers.
That reinvestment would also be used to maintain a comprehensive business support and skills programme which will be set up in the first 12 months using £19 million of the £160 million of government funding allocated to the West Midlands zone over the next 10 years.
The zone has the potential to initially attract more than £2 billion of new investment into the regional economy and a further £3.5bn over its lifetime, creating more than 30,000 jobs by 2034.
The delivery plan will now be submitted to the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC) for final agreement ahead of the release of the funding.
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