PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Opinion: What next for post-Covid manufacturing in its Midlands heartland?

The production line at Jaguar Land Rover's Castle Bromwich factory. Image: PA Wire(Image: PA)

Dr Clive Hickman is the chief executive of the Manufacturing Technology Centre in Coventry, and leads the Midlands Manufacturing Resilience Forum. Here he talks about the future of manufacturing post-Covid:

“For centuries the Midlands has been at the heart of manufacturing in the UK.

Household names such as Land Rover, Cadbury and Rolls Royce are synonymous with the region.

It is renowned for its world class institutions and universities, with their enviable reputations for engineering, and famously is the birthplace of the industrial revolution. As a proportion of jobs, 12 per cent are employed in manufacturing in the East Midlands and 11 per cent in the West, comparing favourably with eight per cent in the UK overall and only two per cent in London.

There is no doubt that manufacturing is in our DNA, but to thrive, the Midlands needs to develop a strategy that is both relevant and resilient for the long-term.

The next phase in the life-cycle of Covid 19, even before ‘the recovery’ period, is a brief window where together we can generate the urgent, innovative thinking which will be needed to determine what this strategy should look like.

So, to coin a phrase, there is an opportunity to catapult the sector to where it should belong in terms of jobs, investment and growth – continuing to make its historic contribution to the nation’s economy, and more.

As the chief executive of the MTC, an organisation which has demonstrated an ability to address problems which are often described as ‘wicked’,

I am honoured to lead an ambitious Commission into Midlands Manufacturing Resilience (M2R), the launch of which was announced recently.