Dame Judith Hackitt tells Chancellor to make Made Smarter the ‘international brand for the fourth industrial revolution’

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Following the launch of a £20m North West pilot before Christmas, the manufacturers’ organisation Make UK (formerly EEF) yesterday called on the Chancellor Philip Hammond MP to increase investment in the Made Smarter business support programme and roll it out nationally as early as this year.

In a speech last night, Dame Judith Hackitt CBE, chair of Make UK, also warned that such initiatives were at risk from being clouded out by Brexit, and that in order to compete globally the government needs to put ‘rocket boosters’ on to the Made Smarter scheme.

Dame Judith Hackitt CBE said: “The Industrial Strategy has spawned other very positive initiatives, in particular the Made Smarter campaign led by Juergen Maier from Siemens.

“It highlights how vital it is that the UK leads a new industrial revolution and makes the most of the rapid digitalisation of our manufacturing base.

“For Britain to thrive our SMEs must be equipped with the skills and technologies needed to make and export more and the pilot that has already been set up in the North West will make an important contribution to enabling SME uptake of technology such as artificial intelligence, automation, robotics and virtual reality.

“On top of this there is committed investment as part of the industrial strategy challenge fund which is designed to boost digital R&D for our sector.

“It is critical that initiatives such as this do not become subsumed to Brexit and I would urge that further funding is made available at the earliest opportunity to ensure the pilot is rolled out across the rest of the UK.

“Made Smarter must become the UK’s international brand for the fourth industrial revolution. We need your government to put rocket boosters on this programme so that the UK can compete globally and adapt to new revolutionary digital technologies.”

In response, the Chancellor Philip Hammond described the Made Smarter pilot as a “ground-breaking programme,” adding: “the point of piloting is to learn what works and what doesn’t. But I can absolutely promise you that what works will be rolled out in due course.”

Earlier in the day Business Secretary Greg Clark MP also talked about the significance of the Made Smarter initiative at Make UK’s annual conference.

Praising the fact that the concept had been initially driven by Siemens’ CEO Juergen Maier and the private sector, he said: “Based on Juergen’s work and supported by you we have had a huge response right across the UK from the manufacturing community from companies big and small in every nation of the United Kingdom. We’ve made substantial progress already.”