Report offers vision of cities transformed by region’s advanced materials expertise

Lou Cordwell

A new report from Greater Manchester Local Enterprise Partnership (GM LEP) envisages how the region’s expertise in advanced materials could help shape the cities of the future.

‘Material Gains: Building Better Cities for People and the Planet’ imagines Greater Manchester in 2038 as a city region realising fairer and greener economic growth enabled by advanced materials.

The report looks ahead to 2038 and a future where advanced materials have had a transformational impact – on how we travel, generate energy and construct buildings, as well as their effect on sectors like manufacturing, food production and healthcare.

Leading commentators from the fields of science, industry and academia also feature, after participating in a roundtable discussion in partnership with GM LEP, MIDAS and The University of Manchester and hosted by Alok Jha, science correspondent with The Economist.

Lou Cordwell, chair of the GM LEP, said: “This report is full of incredible insight provided by some of the key thinkers, organisations and companies involved in advanced materials.

“By 2038 we could see cities transformed – a future of vertical urban farms; rainwater purification units utilising graphene membranes; road surfaces which defy potholes and charge the batteries in the driverless, lightweight vehicles which pass along them.

“The air is clean, and people have a vast array of career opportunities in innovative industries that have not yet been imagined. Transportation is net carbon neutral, integrated, affordable and efficient, and new architectural structures are possible due to enhanced building materials.”

She added: “Innovation is at the heart of our Economic Vision for Greater Manchester.

“Creating new products and services built around advanced materials will generate opportunities for thousands of new, skilled jobs in industries which are only now being imagined.”

Justin Kelly, GM LEP board member and member of the Graphene, Advanced Materials and Manufacturing Alliance (GAMMA), said: “Greater Manchester has the potential to make a significant impact in advanced materials innovation, as part of a wider advanced materials and manufacturing supercluster across the North.

“In this report we highlight the research carried out at our world leading institutions which has then been taken forward by pioneering companies. These innovations create jobs and growth while also addressing some of the most pressing global challenges.

“The report is intended to stimulate further conversation about Greater Manchester’s role in influencing the future for global cities, while also considering how this could bring skilled jobs and economic benefits to our city region.”

Prof Luke Georghiou, deputy president and deputy vice-chancellor at The University of Manchester, said: “Advanced materials are a pervasive technology fundamental to progress in so many areas.

“The excitement of digital innovation sometimes obscures the underpinning material world we inhabit. This white paper demonstrates how sustainable growth in key sectors is being advanced by the remarkable configuration of research and manufacturing capability that we have in Greater Manchester which, over time, will also be reflected in high quality jobs and better quality of life for our citizens.”

The city region’s efforts will be underpinned by Innovation Greater Manchester – a blueprint for a partnership with government to stimulate R&D investment and level up the North, generating a £7bn economic benefit and creating up to 100,000 jobs across the city region.

The report has been produced by the GM LEP in partnership with MIDAS, Greater Manchester’s inward investment agency, and Graphene@Manchester, part of The University of Manchester.

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