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Mayor backs budding Cambridge x Manchester partnership to drive local and national growth

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Mayor backs budding Cambridge x Manchester partnership to drive local and national growth

Mayor of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough, Paul Bristow, joined partners in Manchester last week as part of the next phase of the Cambridge x Manchester Innovation Partnership, a city-to-city collaboration fostering innovation and growth. 

Established last year between the Universities of Cambridge and Manchester, the two-day programme and first formal board meeting included Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham and leaders from businesses including Shaun Grady, UK Chair of AstraZeneca, local authorities and innovation organisations across the two cities.  

Further momentum is gathering behind the partnership’s shared ambition to turn world-leading research and innovation into jobs, new investment and economic growth which delivers real benefits for local people. 

Both cities’ economies bring complementary strengths. Cambridge is a global centre for leading research and discovery, with global investment pull, and Manchester offers scale, space, talent and a strong track record innovation into commercial success. 

By working together, both regions aim to be greater than the sum of their parts and deliver benefits well beyond their own boundaries, including supporting the Government’s mission to grow the national economy.  

For Cambridgeshire and Peterborough, the partnership directly supports the ambitions set out in the Local Growth Plan, which focuses on growing the economy, upgrading transport and other key infrastructure and ensuring that growth benefits local people and communities. The plan sets out a mayoral ambition to triple the size of the local economy by 2050.  

Building strong cross-regional partnerships is part of that ambition, helping to attract investment, strengthen innovation ecosystems and make the case for infrastructure and skills investment. 

The Mayor took part in the first formal meeting of the partnership, alongside Mayor Burnham, university leaders from Cambridge and Manchester, and senior figures from business and innovation. Discussions focused on shared priorities including life sciences, advanced materials, creative industries and digital innovation, as well as the importance of growth which makes a difference to people’s lives. 

The two-day programme also showcased how collaboration can work in practice, including knowledge-sharing on transport, with Manchester’s experience of the Metrolink system and Cambridge’s ongoing work to explore mass transit options to support future growth. Light rail for Cambridge is one of Paul Bristow’s manifesto pledges. 

Other sessions including the creative and cultural innovation economy and how they can be better embedded in the science and tech sectors.  

Paul Bristow said: “The partnership is hugely ambitious for our respective regions and has everything to gain from working together in this way.  

“Building partnerships like this which seek to drive up innovation and investment will be crucial in unlocking the potential of our economy set out in the Local Growth Plan.  

“This is about regions backing each other, sharing what works and ensuring growth brings benefits to all our communities.” 

Professor Deborah Prentice, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, said last week: “The Cambridge x Manchester partnership brings together two great universities and cities with complementary strengths and the will to work together. We are already showing how connected ecosystems can drive innovation, investment and inclusive growth. This week’s meetings underline the momentum behind our shared ambition and the firm foundations being laid for the next phase of work.” 

Kathryn Chapman, Executive Director, Innovate Cambridge, said: “Cambridge and Manchester have deep histories of innovation, with complementary strengths that span the full journey from discovery to scale. By combining Cambridge’s track record in transformational early-stage companies and attraction of capital with Manchester’s strength in development, application and deployment across markets, this partnership will help shape the UK’s future economic growth” 

The Cambridge x Manchester Partnership will continue to develop through further joint activity, helping position both regions at the heart of the UK’s future economic growth.