March 2007

NEWS

 

 


Inflation cools as economy continues to expand
The UK economy grew at its fastest rate for two and a half years in the final quarter of 2006, with growth in gross domestic product (GDP) rising by 0.8 per cent from the previous three-month period, and by 3 per cent compared with the same quarter of 2005. This meant that overall the economy grew by 2.7 per cent in 2006, up from 1.9 per cent in 2005 and close to Chancellor Gordon Brown’s forecast of 2.75 per cent. Growth was driven by the services sector, which expanded by 1 per cent in the final quarter. Within this sector, the output of the distribution, hotel, catering and retail sub-sectors expanded by 1.8 per cent, the fastest rate of growth for nearly five years. However, the industrial sector contracted by 0.2 per cent, as unusually warm winter weather reduced demand for utilities.

Inflation dipped sharply in January, down 0.8 per cent, driven by lower fuel costs, cheaper European air travel and cheaper food and drink. This was the sharpest monthly fall in the consumer price index (CPI) since January 2003 and it left the annual rate of inflation at 2.7 per cent, down from 3 per cent in December (which was the highest rate of inflation for 11 years). January was still the ninth consecutive month in which CPI inflation was above the government’s target of 2 per cent, but the improvement was thought to have influenced the Bank of England to leave interest rates unchanged at its monthly meeting in February.

Annual inflation in the retail price index, which includes interest payment on mortgages, fell from 4.4 per cent in December to 4.2 per cent. A further rise in interest rates has been widely predicted, but this could be headed off by recent cuts in gas and electricity prices, which are predicted to trim around 1.2 per cent from CPI inflation during the course of 2007.

Manufacturers had a promising start to 2007, with the latest monthly poll by the Chartered Institute of Purchasing Supply and the Royal Bank of Scotland showing a main index of manufacturing activity at 52.8 in January, up from a revised 52 in December. New orders increased significantly for the first time in five months and production grew in most sectors, with intermediate goods performing particularly well. The improvement was led by the domestic market, though there was also strong demand from the Asia-Pacific region, led by China and India, and to a lesser extent the US. CIPS/RBS said, however, that there was evidence that the strength of sterling against the dollar was curtailing sales to the US.

 

Tata Steel wins out in Corus takeover battle
Indian firm Tata Steel has won out in a battle with Brazilian rival CSN to take over Anglo-Dutch steel-maker Corus, the UK’s leading steel producer. Tata tabled a winning bid of $11.3 billion to clinch a merger deal that will create the fifth-largest steel producer in the world. Corus, which was created from the merger of British Steel and Dutch firm Hoogovens, employs 47,300 people worldwide, including 24,000 in the UK at plants in Port Talbot, Scunthorpe and Rotherham.


Corus plant at Port Talbot, Wales

Tata Group, based in Mumbai (Bombay) initially tabled a bid of $8.2 billion in October and saw a revised bid of $9.4 billion recommended for acceptance by the Corus board in December, before CSN entered the fray with a higher offer of $9.8 billion. Ratan Tata, owner of Tata Steel, said of his company’s victory: “Tata has a global scale now. This is the first step in showing that Indian industry can step outside its shores into an international market as a global player.”

Another Indian company, outsourcing giant Wipro, is to expand its operations in the UK, creating 500 new jobs in 2007 to boost its existing UK workforce of 2,000. The company already has a base in Reading in South East England, and will establish new operations in other areas of the UK, including Birmingham in the West Midlands. It plans to send workers to India for several months to fully train in its methods and processes. A number of leading Indian IT companies are also expanding their Western operations in a bid to become truly international players. Tata Consultancy Services, for example, has more than 3,000 staff in the UK, while Infosys, which has 1,500 employees in the UK and 60,000 worldwide, last year embarked on a drive to recruit UK graduates, as it expands its European operations.
 

Indian companies lead the way in bio/pharma investment
Indian companies are also emerging as prominent investors in the UK’s pharmaceutical and biotechnology sectors. For example, Reliance Life Sciences Pvt Ltd, an affiliate of Reliance Group, India’s largest private sector enterprise, is to invest $64 million in GeneMedix, a biopharmaceutical company based in Newmarket, Suffolk in Eastern England. GeneMedix has operations in Europe and is listed on both the London and Singapore stock exchanges. The company was set up to develop a range of generic biopharmaceuticals (known as ‘Biosimilars’) and has three of the largest products on the market under development. These include EPO, a stimulant of red blood cell production; G-CSF, another chemotherapy adjunct; and Interferon-alfa, which is used in the treatment of Hepatitis B and C. The alliance with RSL will accelerate the rate of its current programmes and allow it to develop new products.

Also in Eastern England, Panacea Biotec – the second largest vaccine producer in India – has acquired a 10 per cent stake in Cambridge Biostability Ltd (CBL) for around $4 million, as part of a joint venture agreement between the two companies. CBL, a pioneering developer of temperature-stable liquid vaccines, has also signed a long-term licensing agreement with Panacea Biotec. Under this agreement, the Indian company will license CBL’s stable liquid technology to develop a stable liquid version of pentavalent and other combination vaccines, for the treatment of diseases in children such as diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, Hepatitis B and haemophilus influenza B.

The product will be unique in that it will not require cold chain storage or reconstitution before use, meaning that it can be used in remote areas and under extreme temperatures. The worldwide market for such vaccines is estimated at 300 million doses per year, with key customers being international organisations such as Unicef and national governments, with whom Panacea Biotec has built longstanding relations. The company expects to start clinical trials of the vaccine in 2008, with a global product launch expected in 2010.

German biotech company MorphoSys meanwhile has opened a new international headquarters for its research antibody division, AbD Serotec, near Oxford in South East England. The company has consolidated several existing UK facilities into a single research centre, which will also coordinate its research activities worldwide. AbD Serotec specialises in innovative technologies for the production of synthetic antibodies used to accelerate drug discovery. “The Oxford region provides us with a strong infrastructure and a high concentration of excellent academic researchers and innovative biotechnology companies – both potential customers for our technology,” said Dr Simon Moroney, CEO of MorphoSys.
 



Scottish researchers lead the way in life sciences
Scottish Enterprise is to invest $32 million to help develop a world-leading centre for excellence in regenerative medicine and stem cell research in the Scottish capital Edinburgh. The Scottish Centre for Regenerative Medicine (SCRM), which will cost a total of $118 million, will be developed by the University of Edinburgh and will be one of the flagship buildings at the new Centre for Biomedical Research in the city’s Little France district.

The new facility, which will provide cutting-edge research facilities, manufacturing capacity and facilities for commercialisation, will be unique within Europe and will be rivalled internationally only by a facility in Kobe, Japan. It will have three main elements: high-quality accommodation supporting 220 academic researchers, a centre for the ‘scale-up’ development and manufacture of stem cells and multi-occupancy space that will house commercial regenerative medicine research organisations and spin-out companies.

In Glasgow, a new $19 million research programme to develop stem cells for pharmaceutical research has been launched by Dundee-based ITI Life Sciences, in collaboration with the University of Glasgow and Swedish biotech company Cellartis. The three-year programme will focus on developing an automated process to produce high-quality human stem cells, a world first that will put Scotland at the forefront of stem cell research. Work will be carried out at the University of Glasgow’s faculties of Medicine and Biomedical and Life Sciences, which have world-class expertise in the molecular mechanisms that control cell signalling and development. Cellartis, one of the world’s leading stem cell companies, will set up an R&D and manufacturing centre in Dundee.

Meanwhile six Scottish universities, in collaboration with the Scottish Funding Council (SFC), are investing $154.8 million over the next five years to transform biology and life sciences research in Scotland. The universities of Aberdeen, Dundee, Edinburgh, Glasgow, St Andrews and Strathclyde will pool their research expertise in the new Scottish Universities Life Sciences Alliance (SULSA), creating 18 new research posts and 24 support posts in the process. Initially the areas SULSA will focus on include cell biology, systems biology and translational biology, which concerns the application of biological knowledge to develop medicines and therapies for clinical use.



Industry initiatives to harness leading-edge technology
Europe’s first state-of-the-art waterjet machining technology centre is to open at the University of Nottingham in the East Midlands. The University’s School of Mechanical, Materials and Manufacturing Engineering will join forces with Rolls-Royce, the East Midlands Development Agency (emda) and the Midlands Aerospace Alliance to set up the $2.2 million facility, which will explore new ways of using waterjet technology to create parts for the aerospace industry. Waterjet cutting technology is one of the fastest-growing machine tool processes in the world; engineers at the centre will use a six-axis waterjet machine, capable of cutting three-dimensional parts from blocks of metal, to develop new processes and techniques.

The government is to contribute $17.4 million to a project that will provide computer technology to assist in the next generation of aircraft design. The $34.8 million CFMS Core Programme will be conducted by a consortium led by European aircraft manufacturer Airbus, which is also leading another project backed by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) to develop wing technology. The project will involve computer-based technology that will dramatically streamline the design process for new aircraft, reducing testing periods and slashing time to market. It is also expected to benefit the marine and automotive industries. By 2012 it is thought that software simulations will replace physical testing completely, meaning that some parts of the aircraft design process could be reduced from 350 days to 36.

A new International Marine Design Centre based in Newcastle in North East England is to provide a focal point for the region’s ship design industry, marketing its skills worldwide in a bid to attract new contracts. The $4.6 million centre will provide common user facilities for local firms to carry out project work, allowing them to place up to 40 designers in the centre at any one time. Support will be provided by three full-time industry experts based in central Newcastle. The facility will be run by business development company Northern Defence Industries (NDI), and will have close links with Newcastle University’s School of Marine Science and Technology.


Landmark for renewables sector as wind capacity passes 2GW
The UK has become only the seventh country in the world to have more than two gigawatts (GW) of operational wind power capacity. The milestone was passed when the Braes O’Doune wind farm near Stirling in Scotland went into operation, in what was described by Trade and Industry Secretary Alistair Darling as a “significant landmark” for the UK’s wind industry. An output of 2GW is equivalent to two coal-fired power stations. The Braes O’Doune wind farm has a generating capacity of 72 MW, enough to power 45,000 homes in the area, according to the British Wind Energy Association (BWEA).

The government has set a target of generating 10 per cent of the UK’s electricity from renewable sources by 2010, and the latest figures show that currently 4.2 per cent of Britain’s power comes from sources such as wind, solar, hydro and biomass. The UK is now the seventh largest producer of wind energy in the world, behind Germany, Spain, the US, India, Denmark and Italy. Germany is by far the word leader in this technology with a wind generating capacity of 20,622 MW, nearly twice that of its nearest competitor.

Plans are being developed for what will be the world’s biggest wave farm, to be set up at a site in Scotland. Leith-based company Ocean Power Delivery has been testing its Pelamis marine energy device at the European Marine Energy Centre on the island of Orkney. Scottish Power wants to commission four more devices at the same site, in a venture that it believes could generate power for up to 2,000 homes. The Scottish Parliament will contribute $26 million in funding to allow further machines to be tested. The Pelamis device, which consists of large tubular segments, has already been trialled at a commercial wave farm off the north coast of Portugal. “Wave and tidal power could supply a fifth of the UK’s electricity needs and Scotland is ideally placed to generate significant amounts of this pollution-free energy,” said Duncan McLaren, chief executive of Friends of the Earth Scotland.


Pelamis


At the other end of the country, in Cornwall, the South West of England Regional Development Agency (SWRDA) is seeking wave device developers for its proposed $40 million Wave Hub project, the world’s first large-scale wave energy farm. It has already identified three companies to collaborate on the experimental scheme, which is located off the coast near Hayle, among them Ocean Power Delivery with its Pelamis device. The Wave Hub will provide a grid-connected 2 sq km area of sea within which arrays of wave energy conversion devices will be tested over a period of five years, allowing companies to gain experience that can be used for future commercialisation. Up to four different types of device can be accommodated at any one time. The Wave Hub involves the construction of an electrical ‘socket’ on the ocean floor – a sub-sea transformer that will be able to deliver up to 5 MW of electricity to the local network. It is expected to be operational by summer 2008.

The UK is also diversifying its sources of energy supply with a new liquid natural gas (LNG) project on Teesside in North East England. Led by US-based company Excelerate, the project involves the world’s first dockside regasification facility, which allows liquid gas to be converted on-board ship instead of ashore, making it quicker to deliver and reducing impacts on the environment. The project has been completed in the fastest ever time to market of any LNG facility anywhere in the world, with construction work to lay three pipelines, build the loading arm and refurbish the jetty being finished in less than a year. Kathleen Eisbrenner, president and CEO of Excelerate Energy, said: “The combination of a clear regulatory process and a constructive commercial environment allowed Excelerate to bring Teesside GasPort online in only 12 months, [a] world first. We look forward to many years of serving the natural gas supply requirements of the United Kingdom.”


Business park schemes to provide high-spec units
The North East is set to get two new business park developments in the near future. In Hartlepool, work has begun to build a range of high-specification business units at the Queen’s Meadow Business Park. The development will provide seven commercial units ranging in size from 4,424 sq ft to 9,810 sq ft, incorporating office and production/storage areas in a variety of layouts. All the buildings will also incorporate a range of environmental features; completion is expected by autumn 2007. In Tyneside, the latest phase of the Newburn Riverside business park will comprise 50,000 sq ft of Grade A office space and 160,000 sq ft of industrial space, available for sale or to let. Work will begin on the 12-acre mixed-use site in the summer, with the development forming the gateway to the 230-acre business park.


Newburn Riverside

The Northwest Regional Development Agency (NWDA) is investing $9.2 million in infrastructure to support a new international business park at Edge Lane in Liverpool. The development, on the former site of a Marconi plant, is within the city’s Eastern Approaches Strategic Investment Area (SIA), one of its key business zones with significant potential for growth. Work began in February on the park, which is intended to attract investment from companies in the science, technology, digital, creative and IT sectors. By completion in April 2008, it is expected to create 1,000 new jobs for the area, as well as 150 temporary construction jobs.

In Cornwall in the South West, the Brunel Business Park in St Austell has been officially opened by the Duke of York, the UK’s Special Representative for International Trade and Investment. The $9.5 million development, which is aimed at businesses in the ICT and creative industries sectors, sets new standards for sustainable office construction, featuring a range of innovations such as an earth energy heating system, rainwater harvesting and natural ventilation.



Training initiatives to add to national skills base
Trade and Industry Secretary Alistair Darling launched a new $28 million National Skills Academy for Manufacturing in Birmingham in January, one of a series of academies being rolled out across a range of industry sectors. It will deliver training courses designed for industry by industry, and is set to train 40,000 students a year by 2012. The project is backed by some of the biggest names in UK manufacturing, including Rolls-Royce, Caterpillar, Ford, GKN, BAe Systems, Airbus, Corus, VT Group and Nissan. The national centre in Birmingham will join up with lead colleges in each region of England to deliver courses under the National Skills Academy brand. The first three regions are the West Midlands, East Midlands and the North East, with the other regions set to come on-stream by the end of the year, and Wales and Scotland to be included in early 2008.

Another academy, the National Skills Academy for Food and Drink Manufacturing, is due to open in April and will provide vocational education and training for up to 28,000 workers in the food and drink industry during its first four years. The academy is a joint venture between Improve (the Sector Skills Council for the industry) and the Learning and Skills Council (LSC). Training will be delivered via a network of Academy Training Centres in different regions of the UK, each with its own speciality. The first five include Grimsby Institute of Further and Higher Education in Yorkshire and Humber, which will specialise in fish processing, and Reaseheath College in Nantwich, Cheshire, which will focus on dairy products. Others will concentrate on FMCG, meat and poultry and food hygiene, and more institutions will be added to the list as the initiative develops.

Other recently launched training initiatives include Yorkshire Forward’s ‘Manufacturing MASters’ scheme, which is being run by the Manufacturing Advisory Service. This $2 million programme is open to all employees of companies in the Yorkshire and Humber region, and is built around a number of key manufacturing disciplines. On Merseyside in Northwest England, funding of $3.5 million has been secured to set up a Merseyside Maritime Institute, which will provide training for over 500 workers in the maritime sector by 2008. The Institute will focus on developing software-based simulators that will replicate port operations and international trade and logistics scenarios.


London asserts its leading role on the world stage
Think London, the UK capital’s inward investment agency, has launched an initiative to help Chinese businesses establish themselves in London. Touchdown London, set up in collaboration with serviced office provider Avanta, is a bespoke start-up service that offers subsidised office space and support services, including a Chinese-speaking manager who will help new investors to access the full range of Think London services. The agency has already helped 41 Chinese companies, ranging from large conglomerates to small specialist firms, to set up in London, creating 1,000 jobs in the process. The UK is by far the largest recipient of Chinese FDI into Europe, with London itself accounting for 15 per cent of the European total and nearly one-third of all Chinese investment into the UK.

According to a report by consultancy firm McKinsey, commissioned by New York city mayor Michael Bloomberg, the Big Apple is in danger of being overtaken by London as the world’s pre-eminent financial services centre. If current trends continue, said the report, New York could lose up to 7 per cent of its market share, equivalent to 60,000 jobs, over the next five years. The survey pointed out that in 2006 a total of 367 companies joined the London Stock Exchange, compared with 270 on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq combined.

London’s financial workforce grew by 4.3 per cent to 318,000 between 2002 and 2005, while New York’s declined by 0.7 per cent to 328,400. London’s share of the top 50 hedge funds grew from just three in 2002 to 12 in 2006 while New York’s declined from 28 to 18, and over 300 languages are spoken daily in London compared with over 200 in New York. A report in the Guardian newspaper noted that almost half those surveyed by McKinsey thought that New York had lost some of its appeal as a financial centre over the past three years, while the reverse applied to London.

As if to rub salt into the wound, this autumn London will host the first ever regular season game of the US’s National Football League (NFL) to be played outside the Americas. The city beat off competition from Germany, Canada and Mexico to win the bid, which was led by tourist agency Visit London and the Mayor’s office. An estimated 10,000 NFL fans are expected to travel from the US to watch the game, which is also expected to attract North American TV audiences of 30-40 million. “This is an amazing opportunity to showcase London and is one of a number of events that will ensure we are truly on the world stage in the lead-up to the London 2012 Olympic Games,” said James Bidwell, chief executive of Think London. Subsequent NFL games may also be played in London in 2009 and 2011.


Regional news
Vizioncore, a US-based software provider that provides tools for ‘virtualised’ IT environments, has established a headquarters for its EMEA operations in London. The company, headquartered in Buffalo Grove, Illinois, is looking to grow rapidly in the UK over the coming year, with plans that include expanding an existing network of around 50 UK resellers. “Organisations in the UK have been some of the earliest and most innovative adopters of virtualisation. The market is obviously a significant one,” said Colin Wright, Vizioncore’s regional director for northern Europe.

Telekom Atlas has become the first Turkish company to float on a London stock exchange, having joined the Plus market. The telecoms firm offers a range of services to Turkish companies, including broadband, web hosting and internet telephony. Its chief executive, Eytan Levi, said that not only would the float give the company access to investors but it would help to raise its profile in Turkey, as none of its competitors is listed internationally.

Swedish IT consultancy firm Teleca has set up a new branch of its auSystems subsidiary in Winchester, Hampshire in South East England. auSystems specialises in the convergence of fixed and mobile networks, as well as in IT, telecoms and media platforms, via its next-generation networks (NGNs). The new operation will help to drive the company’s growth in the UK and beyond, with 40-50 consultants based in the new office. “The UK market has a growth potential for auSystems’ NGNs that could not have been utilised if we hadn’t been present in the UK,” said Eivind Madsen, the company’s UK managing director.

Sea Space, the development company for the towns of Hastings and Bexhill in Kent in South East England, has launched a new website to encourage inward investment. The site’s business section gives details of support for companies, properties to let, business events and contracts available from Sea Space. Visit the site at: www.seaspace.org.uk.

Philips, the Dutch electronics group, is to increase production of plastic babies’ feeding bottles at its plant in Glemsford, Suffolk in Eastern England, in a vote of confidence in the UK manufacturing sector. The move will safeguard 700 jobs as the plant ramps up production to make an estimated 30 million bottles this year, 10 per cent more than in 2006. Philips bought the plant for $920 million last year, as part of a strategy to build a portfolio of ‘lifestyle’ products, and since then it has invested significantly. Its high level of automation means that, overall, its production costs compare favourably with low-wage economies such as China. The plant also makes a range of other products that are sold worldwide under the brand name Avent. It is expected to contribute sales of $208 million to Philips’ mother and childcare division this year, with 80 per cent of its output being exported.

The East Midlands Development Agency (emda) has launched a new initiative aimed at building business ties with companies in China. The East Midlands China Business Bureau (EMCBB) is an expansion of the former Leicester Shire-China Trade Bureau, which built on existing links between Leicestershire and the Chinese province of Sichuan and which since 2004 assisted more than 300 businesses in the region to strengthen their links with the People’s Republic. The EMCBB will provide a source of China expertise and knowledge, supporting Chinese investors, attracting Chinese visitors to the East Midlands and encouraging academic links and student exchanges.

Car manufacturing is set to resume at MG Rover’s Longbridge plant at Birmingham in the West Midlands, according to Chinese owner Nanjing Automobile, which acquired the UK firm’s assets following its collapse in 2005. Nanjing Auto said its mission was to “revive, maintain and develop” the MG brand at the plant, and it intends to re-employ many former Rover workers. The company will begin manufacturing the MG TF roadster at the plant, and has said previously that Longbridge will eventually have a production capacity of 15,000 cars a year. Meanwhile Land Rover, the Ford subsidiary based nearby at Solihull, has launched a substantially revised version of its long-running Defender model and in March will launch a light commercial vehicle derivative of its Discovery 3 4x4 model.

Swedish bank Handelsbanken is expanding its operations in Yorkshire and Humber, after its Leeds branch reported a 40 per cent increase a year in business. It already has a branch in Hull and has recently opened another in Sheffield. Leeds branch manager Andy Copsey said: “With the ongoing development of the Yorkshire economy we will be looking to open new branches to satisfy specific local needs rather than centralising regionally.” Handelsbanken has been operating in the UK for the past 30 years and has a total of 23 branches around the country.

RDA One NorthEast has extended the regional coverage of its Selective Finance for Investment (SFI) programme, which means that any small or medium-sized enterprise (SME) in the region will be eligible to apply for grant support, regardless of location. Previously, only the 63 per cent of SMEs located within an Assisted Area were eligible for such funding. During 2006, One NorthEast offered some $54 million in SFI funding to 121 companies, helping to create over 5,000 jobs and safeguarding a further 2,029. This support was expected to generate around $670 million in capital investment. Among the biggest beneficiaries in 2006 were global shipping giant Maersk, the Tanfield Group and Norwegian-owned oil and gas contractor Seadrill Engineering.

A consortium of 15 universities in the North of England has been formed to work closely with the creative and cultural industries and to make the most of the opportunities offered by the BBC’s proposed move to the Media City development at Salford Quays. Led by the University of Salford, Northern Edge will harness academic expertise in areas such as journalism, visual arts and music. One of only two such organisations to be funded in the north, the initiative is supported by Northern Way, a collaboration between the three northern Regional Development Agencies (RDAs). Between them, partner universities have around 13,600 students and 400 staff in the creative and cultural disciplines. The Northern Edge initiative will provide a focal point for the development of professional training, research and knowledge transfer in these industries.


Media City, Salford Quays

Electroimpact Inc, a US aerospace tooling company that is a key supplier to Airbus UK, has expanded its operation in Wales, creating more than 20 highly-skilled jobs. The company designs, manufactures and installs the huge electromagnetic automatic wing riveting machines, wing panel assembly systems and assembly jigs used on the Airbus A380. The riveting machines, which can weigh up to 170 tonnes apiece, are built in the US and then shipped to the UK for reassembly at Airbus’s sites in Broughton, North Wales and Filton near Bristol. The company opened a centre in Hawarden in Wales in 2002 to provide 24/7 engineering support and maintenance. Increasing demand for its services has led it to move to larger premises on the Pentre Industrial Estate in Deeside, where it now occupies 10,500 sq ft of workspace and office accommodation.

Japanese automotive component manufacturer Takao Europe Manufacturing Ltd (TEM) is investing $6.4 million to establish a new operation in South Wales that will create 100 jobs. TEM has bought the former Yajima factory on Rassau Industrial Estate in Ebbw Vale and has already started recruiting. The company, which is based in Gloucester in South West England, produces components for Honda and Toyota. It looked at a number of potential sites in Europe and the UK and chose Wales on account of the skilled local workforce and the level of support and advice it received from the Welsh Assembly government, which is providing a Regional Selective Assistance (RSA) grant to support the investment.

Sports clothing firm Howies, based in Cardigan in West Wales, has been acquired by US footwear and apparel giant Timberland. Howies was set up in the mid-1990s by a husband-and-wife team and has since become a favourite label with mountain bikers and skateboarders. It is known for its ethical stance on environmental issues and is one of the UK’s strongest ‘cool’ brands. Since 2005 the firm has received two rounds of equity funding totalling $1.3 million from investment agency Finance Wales, allowing it to expand and invest in new technology. It currently employs around 20 people.

Citigroup is to create a further 185 jobs at its technology centre of excellence in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The latest expansion involves an investment of $42 million and will bring Citigroup’s workforce in Belfast to 560, following an investment of $130 million in 2004 that created 375 jobs. The global financial services firm has also officially opened its new premises at White Star House on the Northern Ireland Science Park. Invest Northern Ireland has supported the move with financial assistance of $7.2 million.

Teleperformance, on of the world’s leading providers of intelligent contact centre and customer relationship management (CRM) solutions, is to invest $11 million in a new contact centre in Newry, Northern Ireland. Invest NI has contributed $4.5 million in assistance to the project, which involves a centre of 23,000 sq ft that will create 450 jobs by 2010. Teleperformance already has a 700-seat contact centre in Bangor, Co Down, and the new development will almost double the company’s capacity. The French company first set up operations in Northern Ireland ten years ago, and employs over 2,000 staff across its whole UK network.


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