Companies
working in, or looking to set up in, the space community at Harwell will
benefit from 1 million pound funding to help them to go further and faster
towards commercial success, David Willetts announced. The investment in
innovative R and D projects is part of the Technology Strategy Board's Launch
pad initiative which supports business groups, suppliers and associated
institutions who work together in the same location.
David
Willetts, Minister for Universities and Science, speaking at the European Space
Solutions Conference, said: "Space is one of our most promising sectors
and the Government is determined to foster innovation and help companies invest
in R and D to drive long-term growth.
This
funding will support innovative projects where small businesses may see it as
too risky to go it alone when developing their ideas into new products or
services. It could also help companies grow by connecting them with mentors,
expert advisors and the investor community around the world class Harwell
campus.
Harwell
is becoming a crucial space cluster and this initiative takes it further “Iain
Gray, Chief Executive of the Technology Strategy Board, said: "This
important competition will support small and medium sized businesses to achieve
their growth ambitions through engagement with the facilities and expertise
available around the developing space cluster at Harwell.
Through
provision of up to 100,000 pound per project and a programme of business and
finance support services around the cluster, Launch pad will support winning
businesses in achieving their potential, and in doing so, the development of
the next generation of high growth space applications and technologies
businesses."
A Launch
pad is one of the Technology Strategy Board's business tools designed to
support the growth phase of existing clusters - a geographic concentration of
interconnected business, suppliers and associated institutions in a particular
field. Due to the concentration within a cluster, there are often advantages of
speed and knowledge transfer that the Launch pad initiative encourages.
This
builds on the success of the Technology Strategy Board's 1.25 million pound
investment in London's tech and digital hub Tech City in 2011.The competition
attracted over 200 applications from SMEs to work in the digital space in
Shoreditch, London, gaining an additional 1.5 million pound of private sector
funding towards 13 projects now at various stages of completion.
Support
to raise appropriate new external finance is a key component of a Launch pad
and applicants are likely to benefit most from participation in the programme
if this aligns with their business objectives. The Space Launch pad will
encourage engagement with space sector expertise and facilities on the Harwell
campus. These include the European Space Agency, the Science and Technology
Facilities Council, RAL Space and the Satellite Applications Catapult centre, a
world-class centre for the development and commercial exploitation of space and
satellite-based products, services and applications currently being established
at Harwell.
Future
planned Launch pads are in the materials and manufacturing sector, which will
focus on a cluster of companies around Dares bury and Runcorn Heath, as well as
a series of Launch pads in digital and creative clusters across different parts
of the UK.In each Launch pad the Technology Strategy Board will be working with
a local partner organisation, known as a cluster champion, to deliver a full
package of support to the competition winners and to engage with the cluster as
a whole.
For further information
visit: http://www.spacemart.com/reports/UK_space_companies_benefit_from_investment_in_research_and_development_999.html
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