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UK scores highly in
entrepreneurial stakes
The UK is one of the most entrepreneurial countries in the world – less so
than the US or Canada, admittedly, but ahead of rivals such as Japan,
Germany, France and Italy, according to the Global Entrepreneurship
Monitor (GEM) 2004. The survey finds that the proportion of people in the
UK expecting to start a business over the next three years has increased
significantly, from 7.8 per cent of the population in 2002 to 9.5 per cent
in 2004. It shows that the North-South enterprise gap is narrowing, while
there has been a big increase in business start-ups by women –
particularly in the East Midlands, Eastern England, the North East, the
North West, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
Students show greater levels of entrepreneurial activity than before, up
from 0.9 per cent in 2003 to 2.3 per cent in 2004, and again with women to
the fore. People from ethnic minorities are also more likely than most to
start their own business. The region with the biggest number of
high-growth start-ups is Wales, which accounts for 40 per cent of the
national total, while the South West claims 29.9 per cent of all new
technology start-ups. The GEM survey, now in its sixth year, is a
worldwide study carried out by the London Business School and Babson
College. For the 2004 report, it questioned 25,000 adults across the UK.
A former coalfield in the East Midlands has been named the most
enterprising place in the UK. Sherwood Energy Village in North
Nottinghamshire was announced as the winner of the Enterprising Britain
competition by Chancellor Gordon Brown at a London conference in February.
The 12 regional finalists also included the cities of Leeds and Belfast
and Hatton Garden in London. Sherwood Energy Village is a scheme devised
by the community of Ollerton in response to the closure of its colliery in
1994 and the loss of two textile factories. The aim of the project was to
rebuild and diversify the town’s economic base and in this it has
succeeded, by creating a mixed-use development on a 91-acre site,
following core principles of economic and environmental sustainability. By
2007, the project will have created 1,500 new jobs – compared with 1,000
supported by the colliery in its heyday.
Spin-out
companies make their presence felt
The number of spin-out companies from universities listing on the stock
market increased to nine in 2004, from just one a year earlier. Though the
numbers are still small, the trend underlines the growing significance of
this type of company and justifies the government’s use of tax breaks to
encourage universities to commercialise their research, according to
analysts. The biggest spin-out in 2004 was ARK Therapeutics, a gene
medicine company originating at University College London, whose IPO on
the London Stock Exchange was valued at $319 million. Others came from the
universities of Oxford, Cambridge, Bath, Southampton, Edinburgh, St
Andrew’s and Queen’s, Belfast. Between them, they had a combined value of
$1.1 billion.
The spin-out business model is also robust, with far better survival rates
than the average for new technology start-ups. According to research by
the Gatsby Charitable Foundation, the failure rate for spin-outs from 10
universities (including Oxford, Edinburgh, Strathclyde and Imperial
College, London) was less than 10 per cent, compared with an average of
60-70 per cent among high-tech companies in general.
The increase in spin-outs reflects a significant change in the way
universities and higher education institutions (HEIs) in the UK transfer
knowledge when dealing with business, according to a report from the
Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE). The Higher
Education-Business and Community Interaction Survey 2002-03 shows that the
level and quality of interaction between universities and business have
increased, with 89 per cent of HEIs now offering a single entry point and
79 per cent helping companies to identify the resources they need.
Commercial and public sector organisations spent $247 million on education
and continuing professional development supplied by the HE sector in the
period surveyed, and HEIs generated consultancy income of $319.2 million,
up 38 per cent year-on-year. There was also a significant increase in
employment by spin-out companies, and patent applications were up by 26
per cent. UK universities create one spin-out company for every $32
million spent on research, compared with every $114 million in the US.
Public sector research establishments (PSREs), such as research council
institutes and NHS Trusts, are also generating more income from links with
business and from licensing intellectual property. Boosted by government
incentives, PSREs generated nearly $200 million from knowledge transfer in
2003-04, according to a survey by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI)’s
Office of Science and Technology. The report shows that over the course of
the year 316 patent applications were made and 228 patents were granted,
621 licensing agreements were made and 69 spin-out companies were
established. Successful examples of knowledge transfer activities include
the British Geological Survey, which has licensed digital data identifying
areas of ground instability for use by the insurance and conveyancing
industries, and the Health Protection Agency, which has licensed rights to
Chiron Vaccines for the manufacture of meningitis B vaccines.
Knowledge
transfer boosts academic links with business
Among individual initiatives around the country, Lancaster University in
North West England has opened a new ICT centre to promote technology
transfer between its ICT researchers and local industry, particularly
small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). InfoLab21 will form a physical
hub for a virtual network of more than 100 companies in the region. It
will bring together 250 ICT experts in an academic wing and around 20
specialised ICT SMEs in its Knowledge Business Centre, and will also
contain a training suite. The university is internationally respected for
its ICT research, which covers areas such as signal processing and coding,
wired and wireless computer networking, software systems engineering and
human-computer interfacing.
The University of Glasgow, in Scotland, has developed software for an
award-winning electrocardiogram (ECG) recorder made by US-based Quinton
Cardiology Systems. Quinton and its predecessors have collaborated with
the university for more than 15 years, and in this case the two worked in
partnership at the company’s Deerfield, Wisconsin facility to develop
software for the Atria 3000 ECG recorder. The machine, used in the
diagnosis, monitoring and management of patients with heart disease,
incorporates cutting-edge capabilities, such as wireless communications,
within a traditional ECG recorder. The software, the University of Glasgow
ECG Interpretation Algorithm, was first developed in the 1970s and is
known worldwide as ‘the Glasgow program’.
A new company is being established at Newcastle University that will help
to speed up the development of anti-cancer drugs. Cancer Dynamics, set up
with the assistance of the Centre of Excellence for Life Sciences (CELS),
will provide integrated pre-clinical consultancy and pharmacology
resources to the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries, initially in
Europe but later worldwide. It will help to bring more anti-cancer drugs
to clinical trials, and will design trials in a way that improves the
speed and efficiency of drug development. The company, the first of its
kind in Europe, will employ 10 people initially, rising to 20 in the
medium term.
A new Composite Structures Development Centre has opened at Airbus UK’s
site at Filton, near Bristol in South West England. The $22.8 million
facility, which will concentrate on composites for the aerospace and
marine sectors, will act as a regional hub for companies, colleges and
universities active in the sector. It is one of several regional centres
planned in a National Composites Network, as demand for the high-tech
materials grows. It will undertake more than $190 million of R&D work over
the next five years, and will employ around 100 engineers. Airbus is one
of six organisations leading the national network.
Meanwhile, the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business (GSB) is
to relocate its campus from Barcelona in Spain to London. After a decade
in Spain, the school has decided to move its Executive MBA Program to
benefit from London’s corporate and financial power. “Going forward, the
GSB belongs in Europe’s business centre. It’s no accident that business
leaders rank London as the top European city in which to do business,”
said its dean, Edward A. Snyder. Chicago GSB is a long-established
institution that currently ranks sixth in the Financial Times list of the
top 100 full-time MBA programmes worldwide. It will make its new home at
the Woolgate Exchange, at 25 Basinghall Street in the City of London.
Manufacturing and
services bring economic cheer
Manufacturing output rose twice as fast as expected in December 2004,
growing by 0.6 per cent from November – the first time for several months
that data has surpassed expectations. This prompted the Office for
National Statistics (ONS) to revise its forecast for overall economic
growth in the final quarter of the year from 0.7 per cent to 0.8 per cent.
The growth rate for manufacturing output in the final quarter has been
revised to 0.2 per cent.
The UK was the world’s second largest exporter and third largest importer
of services in 2003, according to a separate survey by the ONS. It
accounted for 8 per cent of global exports, second only to the US, and 6.7
per cent of imports, behind the US and Germany. Exports of services grew
by 4.5 per cent over the year and imports by 5.4 per cent, creating a
surplus of $29.6 billion, the same as in 2002. Exports have more than
doubled since 1993, from $77.9 billion to $172.9 billion, while imports
have risen from $66.5 billion to $144.5 billion.
The UK has a trade surplus in services with every continent except Europe
(this is largely explained by the number of UK tourists travelling to
France and Spain), and in 2003 recorded a surplus in every service
category except transportation, travel and government services. The
biggest rise by category was in computer and information services, exports
of which jumped 35 per cent to $8.9 billion. Architecture also scored
well, helped by prestigious projects such as Lord Foster’s designs for the
new Reichstag dome in Berlin and the world’s highest road bridge, which
opened recently over the River Tarn in central France. Exports of services
now account for more than half of the UK’s total exports (excluding oil).
Overall, the UK’s trade deficit with the rest of the world narrowed last
December, from $6.3 billion in November to $5.7 billion. For whole-year
2004, the ONS estimates the deficit at $74.7 billion, compared with $60.4
billion in 2003.
Postal market
liberalisation to be delivered early
The UK’s postal market is to liberalised from the beginning of 2006, more
than a year earlier than planned. Postal regulator Postcomm has announced
that licensed companies will be permitted to enter the market from 1
January 2006. The move is part of an effort to encourage the incumbent
operator Royal Mail, which currently holds 99 per cent of the market, to
improve its levels of service.
Companies such as Business Post, Express Dairies and Deutsche Post already
deliver letters in the UK, but their services are limited to bulk business
mail. From next year, license holders will be able to target a wider range
of customers and offer more services, such as dedicated collection boxes
and specified delivery areas. Postcomm has already granted a long-term
postal license to Mail Plus, owned by La Poste of France, and others are
thought to be waiting in the wings. The parcel delivery market is already
fully liberalised.
Nissan and BMW announce
major new investments
Nissan Motor
Manufacturing UK has announced plans to build a new compact-crossover car model,
codenamed the P32L, at its plant in Sunderland, North East England. Production
of the car, which will be based on the Qashqai concept show unveiled at the
Geneva Motor Show last year, is scheduled to begin in December 2006, with an
initial output of around 130,000 units a year. It will be part-people carrier
and part-hatchback, and will feature four-wheel drive. Another new model, based
on the Tone model introduced at the Paris Motor Show in the autumn, is due to go
into production at Sunderland in January 2006. Two further models, the Navara
Crew Cab pick-up and the Zaroot concept SUV, are due to be unveiled in Geneva
this March.
The latest investment is worth $420 million, including a Regional Selective
Assistance (RSA) grant of $9 million from the DTI, and was won in the face of
stiff competition from rival Nissan facilities in France. It will boost annual
production at the plant, the largest and most efficient in Europe, to 400,000
units, safeguarding 1,000 jobs and creating an additional 200. Over the past 20
years, the Japanese car giant has created 4,500 jobs at its Sunderland plant,
together with a further 7,000 in the North East supply chain.
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German car-maker BMW is to invest a further
$190 million at its plant at Cowley in Oxford, South East England to increase
production of its popular new Mini model, launched in 2001. The plant, which
already employs 4,500 people, will be upgraded, with a new body shell production
building and modernised machinery. Around 200 new jobs will be created.
Production is expected to rise from 189,000 vehicles in 2004 to more than
200,000 per year from 2007. |
The iconic Mini, voted European ‘Car of the
Century’ by an international panel, sells in 73 countries. In 2004, some
40,000 were sold in the UK and 36,000 in the US, while Germany, Japan,
Italy and China are also important markets. The latest announcement brings
BMW’s total investment in the UK (including at its Rolls-Royce plant at
Goodwood, Surrey) to $1.3 billion since 2000.
US-owned company BorgWarner meanwhile has
won a multi-million-dollar contract to produce 4WD units for a new Audi SUV
model, and will create more than 30 new jobs at its plant in Margam, South
Wales. This comes shortly after it won another major contract to supply Fiat
General Motors Powertrain (FGP) with synchroniser components for manual
transmissions. Both contracts are critical for the company’s drive into the
manual transmission components and 4WD markets in Europe.
Total car production in the UK in the final quarter of 2004, seasonally
adjusted, fell by 0.1 per cent, though production for the domestic market
increased by 3.4 per cent. The total number of cars produced for the export
market reached record levels for the year as a whole, reaching nearly 1.2
million units, up 3.1 per cent year-on-year. Production for the home market
declined to just over 467,000 units, bringing the total for the year to 1,179,
753, a marginal decrease of 0.7 per cent from 2003.
Total commercial vehicle production for the final quarter, not seasonally
adjusted, rose by 1.6 per cent when compared with the same period a year
earlier. Production allocated for the export market rose by 16.8 per cent, while
production for the home market fell by 17.2 per cent. For the year, production
was up 10.8 per cent to 209,293 units. Again, growth was strongest in the export
market, rising 24.5 per cent to 128,107 vehicles.
New plans on the
drawing-board
Headline rents and
inducements in the Central London office market remained largely unchanged
during the final quarter of 2004, according to DTZ Research’s latest survey.
Rentals in the City remained at $85.5 per sq ft, with three years of a 15-year
lease offered free. In the West End, prime rents were static at $118.75 per sq
ft. The total volume of space marketed in the final quarter fell marginally,
reducing the availability ratio across Central London from 12.9 per cent to 12.6
per cent. Take-up rose from 3.6 million sq ft in the third quarter to 4.2
million sq ft in the fourth, bringing the total for the year to 13.7 million sq
ft. Known requirements at the end of Q4 were 5.3 million sq ft, 10 per cent less
than at the end of Q3. Construction starts for the quarter totalled 0.6 million
sq ft but, as projects reached completion, the total amount of space under
construction fell to 5.4 million sq ft, 40 per cent of which was speculative.
Outside London, many different types of business accommodation are in the
development pipeline. Some 150,000 sq ft of new space is to be developed at
Brooklands Industrial Estate at Weybridge in Surrey, South East England, near
the site of a planned 148-acre development scheme by Mercedes-Benz that will
incorporate the remains of the historic Brooklands racing track. In the South
West, a 600,000 sq ft business park has been approved at Paignton in South
Devon. The 42-acre Long Road development will be one of the largest in the West
Country for a decade and is likely to include offices, hotels and retail
facilities.
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In Milton Keynes,
Eastern England, work is due to start on a continental-style business
district that will include offices, hotels, restaurants and apartments,
all set around a central square. The $380 million Central Business
Exchange III (CBX 3) development will rise to 14 storeys and will include
50,000 sq ft of office accommodation, together with conference facilities.
The 5.8-acre site, on Midsummer Boulevard and Witan Gate at the western
edge of the city centre, is five minutes’ walk from the town’s railway
station and will be linked to the existing CBX1 and CBX2 developments,
which contain offices, shops and leisure facilities. |

Witan Gate view of CBX3, Milton
Keynes |
Two new business developments have been
approved in the Blyth Valley in Northumberland, North East England. Four
business units suitable for a range of uses, providing total space of 43,000 sq
ft, will be built at the Kitty Brewster Industrial Estate in Blyth, on a 3-acre
site that has close links to the town’s Riverside Industrial Estates. At the
Nelson Industrial Estate in Cramlington, a new development catering for
companies from sectors including the manufacturing, IT and service industries
will create 26,900 sq ft of space.
In the North West, two towns – Blackpool and Salford – are to get their own
Urban Regeneration Companies (URCs). In Blackpool, a masterplan is being drawn
up to revitalise the attractions of this venerable seaside resort and transform
it into an international visitor destination. Conference facilities, casinos and
retail developments are among the plans on the drawing-board. In Central Salford,
planners hope to transform the town into one of the most vibrant areas in the
North West economy. A new, speculative 154,000 sq ft landmark office building is
already earmarked for the popular Salford Quays area. Rentals for the Regent
development will be marketed at around $38 per sq ft.
In Dundee, Scotland, $95 million will be injected over the next ten years into
the Seabraes Yards project, which will transform the site of a former railway
goods yard into a dynamic business environment for the creative media
industries. The first major project on the 20-acre site, already well under way,
involves the redevelopment of a landmark building into a creative media centre
that will offer up to 100,000 sq ft of space. Further developments will include
office space, private housing and student accommodation.
The Welsh Development Agency (WDA) is to help fund the construction of nearly
400,000 sq ft of new business premises in West Wales and the Valleys, designed
to accommodate 1,400 new jobs. The development has been made possible by $15.6
million of new European Objective One funding, which is intended to regenerate
less prosperous areas by helping businesses to establish themselves there. Also
in South Wales, a new speculative office building of 90,000 sq ft is to be built
in the capital Cardiff. The development is at Callaghan Square (formerly Bute
Square), where developers have already built 140,000 sq ft of office space and
have planning permission for a further 420,000 sq ft.
Broadband
market continues to grow
Between December 2003 and
December 2004 there was a 3.1 per cent increase in the number of active
subscriptions to the internet, according to the latest survey of internet
service providers (ISPs). The market share for permanent connections continued
to increase, reaching 39.4 per cent of all new connections, compared with 21.9
per cent a year before. The number of new dial-up connections continued to
decline, falling in December by 20.1 per cent year-on-year. Overall, dial-up
still accounts for the majority of connections, though its market share has now
fallen to 60.6 per cent, as the number of new broadband, cable and leased line
connections continues to increase.
British Telecom plans to double broadband speeds for up to 90 per cent of its
business and domestic customers at no extra cost, following a similar move by
its rival AOL. The service provided to many domestic customers has already been
upgraded to handle download speeds of 2Mbps, and similar improvements will
follow for business customers from 1 April. Usage allowances vary from 1Gb to
30Gb a month, depending on the package purchased. BT has seen its share of the
increasingly competitive broadband market eroded in recent months, from 39 per
cent to 36 per cent, as AOL and other rivals – including Plusnet and UK Online –
have enhanced their offerings.
London celebrates
links with Chinese investors
More than 450 business leaders, entrepreneurs and opinion formers, including
Chinese Ambassador Zha Peixin, attended the biggest ever event held in London
for the Chinese business community. The gathering, which took place in early
February at the Victoria and Albert Museum and was hosted by Mayor of London Ken
Livingstone, Think London (London’s inward investment agency) and UK Trade &
Investment, was intended to celebrate the growing importance of trade and
investment links, and also cultural links, between the UK and China.
China is the fastest-growing economy in the world. The UK is the biggest
European investor in China and, conversely, is the largest European recipient of
Chinese FDI, accounting for 50 per cent of the total since 1997. Chinese
businesses account for a third of all investment into the UK from the
Asia-Pacific region, and London accounts for one-third of all Chinese
investment, with many Chinese firms choosing to set up their headquarters in a
city they consider a gateway to the UK and the rest of Europe. There are now
more than 250 Chinese businesses in the capital, from both the mainland and Hong
Kong, and London’s Chinese community numbers over 80,000 people.
Think London’s free consultancy service has helped more than 30 Chinese firms to
set up or expand in the capital, including Shanghai General Electronics Group,
PetroChina International, telecoms equipment manufacturer ZTE and Hong
Kong-based food retailer Glo Group. “London was chosen as the most beneficial
city in which to expand and to reach other European countries, and benefit from
London’s standing as a world city,” commented Bingjun Si, managing director of
PetroChina. China Telecom, the country’s largest fixed-line operator, has
recently established a European HQ in London to target international business
across the continent.
Think London is now planning to open offices in Beijing and Shanghai to help
secure further Chinese inward investment. It is also launching an incubator
service for new Chinese arrivals in the capital. The Touchdown London initiative
provides a package of services that includes legal, visa and recruitment advice,
office space, Wi-Fi access, networking and multilingual support.
Around the regions
Work on a $13.3 million e-Innovation Centre in Telford in the West Midlands is
set for completion by the end of May, with the building ready for occupation in
July. The landmark centre, at the University of Wolverhampton campus in
Priorslee, will provide start-up premises and grow-on space for companies
involved in high-tech businesses, such as e-commerce and e-engineering.
Meanwhile, Telford Development Agency has produced a new promotional CD for
potential investors, containing a wealth of information about the town.
Telformation also contains interviews with major investors, old and new; more
information at: www.cometotelford.co.uk.
RDA Yorkshire Forward has announced a $17.1 million funding package that will
provide businesses in North Yorkshire and the Humber region with free training
for their staff. The Employer Training Programme (ETP), managed by the Learning
and Skills Council, is being launched in April a year early, before the
government rolls the scheme out nationally in 2006. Branded ‘train2gain’, it has
already been piloted in parts of Yorkshire. It provides free training in the
workplace in any job-related area up to NVQ Level 2 and, for companies with 250
employees or fewer, will even pay part of their wages while they are training.
The Corus steelworks at Scunthorpe in North Lincolnshire, Yorkshire and Humber,
is to rebuild one of its four giant blast furnaces at a cost of $43.7 million.
The 50-year-old Queen Victoria furnace, capable of producing 24,000 tonnes of
iron ore a week, will be rebuilt to run at full capacity from April to October,
along with its three sister ‘Queens’, with the intention of building up steel
stocks. The investment comes on top of $83.6 million already earmarked this year
to make the Scunthorpe steelworks the best in Europe.
The Metals Forum, the recently formed umbrella organisation for the UK metals
sector, has launched its website at: www.metalsforum.org. One of the body’s aims
is to make information about the $72.2 billion industry more readily accessible,
to both industry and the public. In Yorkshire and Humber, Yorkshire Forward has
published a new guide to help chemical companies improve their public image. The
free guide, Chemicals and the Community, gives examples of how companies can
work with local residents and schools, government and the media. Contact:
lucy.fountain@yorkshire-forward.com.
HCC Insurance Holdings, based in Houston, Texas, is to acquire the remaining 66
per cent interest it does not already own in the De Montfort Group, based in
Leicester in the East Midlands. The De Montfort Group, which provides surety and
credit card insurance to small and medium-sized companies, will become part of
the HCC Surety Group.
Holcim, a Swiss supplier of cement, aggregates, concrete and construction
services, is to acquire Aggregate Industries, based in Markfield in the East
Midlands, for around $3.4 billion. Aggregate Industries is a major producer of
primary, secondary and recycled construction aggregates, asphalt, ready-mixed
concrete and pre-cast concrete products. It also operates a national contracting
business, giving Holcim entry into the attractive UK market.
Irish-owned Xtratherm (UK) Ltd, part of the Hytherm Group, is to invest $13.3
million in a new manufacturing facility at Holmewood Industrial Park near
Chesterfield in the East Midlands. The company will manufacture insulation
products for the construction industry at the 220,000 sq ft facility, beginning
this summer, and the project will create 95 new jobs over the next few years.
The investment was supported by the East Midlands Development Agency (emda),
which contributed a grant worth $1.9 million.
Renewable energy specialist Airtricity, based in Dublin, is to develop a $19
million wind farm on Bessy Bell Mountain, situated between Omagh and Strabane in
Northern Ireland. The Irish company began developing the project in 2001; when
it is fully operational, its nine 1.3MW turbines will produce 11.7MW of
electricity – enough to power 9,000 homes. It is estimated that the project will
save the release of 30,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide each year into the
atmosphere, equivalent to the output of 700 cars.
Caterpillar, the US manufacturer of construction and mining equipment, is to
open a new shared financial services centre in Larne, Northern Ireland. The
centre, which will create 25 new jobs over the next three years, will provide a
central service for the thousands of transactions – such as invoicing, credit
control and treasury – involved in the running of Caterpillar Group companies
across Europe. Invest Northern Ireland supported the investment with a selective
financial assistance grant of $418,000.
Silverpop, a US-based provider of e-mail marketing solutions, has opened a
European office in London. The company helps its clients to maximise the
potential of e-mail when dealing with customers and partners, and is looking to
capitalise on the explosive growth of online marketing in the UK. Mail-Filters.com,
a US-based provider of anti-spam technology, has opened an office in London to
cover the EMEA region. Based in San Mateo, California, the company supplies its
proprietary technology in more than 100 countries worldwide, and in more than 30
languages.
Another US company, Logo Design Works, an internet-based design shop
headquartered in Sarasota, Florida, has opened an office in London and
established an online presence (at www.logodesignworks.co.uk). The company’s
designers work with clients on a one-to-one basis, offering advice on building
their brands both online and offline.
Landsbanki Holdings (UK), a subsidiary of financial institution Landsbanki of
Iceland, has made a cash offer of around $81 million for London-based
stockbroker Teather & Greenwood. The British firm provides a fully integrated
service to smaller and expanding companies, spanning corporate finance, equities
research, institutional sales and market-making. It is reported to have raised
more than $665 million for clients over the past three years.
US conglomerate Cargill, headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota, has started
trading electricity and gas from a new office in London. After setting up its
power trading business in Geneva, Switzerland in 2000, Cargill now markets,
trades and distributes natural gas throughout Europe.
A new six-times-a-week air service has been launched from London City Airport to
Bern and Lugano in Switzerland. The weekday service, operated by Darwin Airlines
and using Saab 2000 turboprop aircraft, will connect with an existing service
between Lugano and Rome.
US pharmaceutical company Allergan is to move its European R&D centre from
Sophia Antipolis in southern France to High Wycombe in South East England. The
company, based in Irvine, California, is a global healthcare company whose
markets include eyecare and skincare products.
US semiconductor manufacturer Ramtron has opened a European sales office in
Bracknell, South East England and is to enlarge its regional sales and customer
service staff. The company, based in Colorado Springs, supplies non-volatile
ferroelectric semiconductors, including serial and parallel FRAM (ferroelectric
random access memory) chips and processor companion devices.
BCS Global Networks, a Canadian provider of managed internet protocol (IP)
communications services, has opened a business unit in Brighton on the south
coast. BCS supplies IP-based voice, video and data services to organisations
across north America and Europe. Meanwhile ChoicePoint, a US-based provider of
identification verification services, is to acquire i2, a developer of visual
investigative and link analysis software. Software from i2, which is based in
Cambridge in Eastern England, is used by intelligence and law enforcement
agencies around the world.
Swedish lock group Assa Abloy is to acquire specialist door supplier Doorman
Services, based in South Shields, North East England, for around $11 million.
Doorman installs and services manual and automatic doors and roller blinds
throughout the UK. It employs 170 people and has a strong presence in the retail
sector.
Nisai Group, a UK-based learning and educational company, is relocating a part
of its business previously based in India to Middlesbrough, North East England,
reversing the recent offshoring trend among British companies. The company,
which provides live interactive teaching through a Virtual Academy, grew
frustrated after losing highly trained graduates to other companies operating in
India. It will create 30 jobs initially at its new Riverside Park base, and
expects this to grow to 120 over the next three years.
US-based technology integrator Avanade, a joint venture between Microsoft and
Accenture, has opened an office in Edinburgh, Scotland, creating 50 highly
skilled jobs. The company, which specialises in Microsoft products, helps
companies around the world to maximise their IT investment. Last financial year,
it saw its business in the UK grow by 181 per cent.
US computer giant Dell is to expand its UK operation – its second largest
outside the US – with a new customer sales and support office at City Park in
Glasgow, Scotland. The centre will support medium and large business customers,
as well as public sector users. It will create an initial 400 new jobs by 2006,
and around 850 in total by 2008. Dell’s investment was supported by an RSA grant
of $14.3 million from the Scottish government, whose First Minister Jack
McConnell welcomed the expansion, saying: “We have the skills, we have the
innovation and, above all, we have the confidence and the hunger for success.”
Citiraya Recycling Technology, part of the Citiraya Group of Singapore and one
of the world’s leaders in the field of ‘e-waste’, has opened a $1.9 million
recycling plant at Hirwaun in South Wales. The 35,000 sq ft plant will allow
manufacturers of TV sets and computer monitors to comply with strict new
European Union directives on recycling, using laser cutting technology to
separate and recycle elements in cathode tubes for re-use – one of the first
facilities in the UK with this capability. The plant, the first of a series
Citiraya plans to open across Europe, will be capable of handling 500,000
cathode ray tubes a year, or about 5 per cent of the UK’s annual total of
redundant tubes. It will employ 70 people.
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