Liverpool City Region can become magnet for global tech companies, Metro Mayor tells Digital Summit

Posted 23rd October 2017
 
 
7 minutes read
 
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Metro Mayor, Steve Rotheram, told a gathering of tech entrepreneurs, academics and policy-makers, that a combination of world-class connectivity and predictable renewable energy could make the City Region a magnet for investment from global tech companies.

In an ambitious speech to the City Region’s first Digital Summit, which was co-hosted by Liverpool City Region Combined Authority and the Liverpool City Region LEP, the Metro Mayor highlighted the area’s uniquely competitive asset base, including the UK’s most powerful computing centre at the Hartree Centre, Liverpool’s Material’s Innovation Factory and Sensor City, and an emerging cluster of tech companies beginning to make a real global impact. He outlined his twin priorities would be to invest in world-class digital infrastructure – linking directly to the GTT trans-Atlantic cable that reaches the UK at Southport – and exploiting the area’s unique potential for renewable energy by harnessing the power of the River Mersey.

Steve Rotheram said;
“My aim is to make the city region that was the gateway to the first Industrial Revolution a globally important centre in the Fourth Industrial Revolution. By combining world-class digital connectivity and a predictable source of renewable energy we can make a uniquely attractive and compelling offer to global tech companies pledged to achieve carbon neutrality.

When you combine that with a world-class talent pool, there’s no reason why we cannot compete successfully with leading international cities.”

John Whaling, Innovation & Strategic Investment Lead for the Liverpool City Region Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) said:

“This was a really important gathering and an opportunity for us to scan the horizon to see how we build on our distinctive digital assets and examples of world-leading innovation to lever growth across all sectors. Working together we have the opportunity to deliver the support and investment required to fulfil this potential, generate new commercial activities, and build a new economic identity for our City Region.”

Showcasing local talent was one of the themes of the Summit, which included the world’s first Mayoral Question Time in Virtual Reality courtesy of pioneering Liverpool VR company vTime. The vTime platform enables people in different locations around the world to meet in a series of immersive virtual environments for social or business interaction. The company, who are establishing a base in San Francisco, recently partnered with Microsoft to bring their ultra-immersive social VR experience to millions of Window 10 users as launch title for the Window Mixed Reality headsets. The company is also in the process of exploring further innovative applications of their cutting-edge platform in areas including education, entertainment and health-care.

The Question Time session included a live link-up with Silicon Valley-based academic and tech guru Terry Beaubois who joined the session from Pala Alto, and also feature vTime’s Vicky Roberts and was moderated by former BBC journalist Mick Ord.

Terry Beaubois acknowledged the strength of Liverpool’s growing tech cluster and commended the City Region’s ambition to become a global player.
“I have worked with Liverpool company Red Ninja on smart city projects in India and Silicon Valley for the last few years. Liverpool has some amazing innovative companies and it was exciting to discuss how technology can change the city region with Mayor Steve Rotheram on vTime.”

The Summit also included key note contributions from Alison Kennedy, Director of STFC Hartree, Dr Jon Hague Vice President Open Innovation at Unilever, Irene Lopez de Vallero Director of Research at the UK Digital Catapult, Kelvin Prescott, Head of Specialist SalesO2 and vTime MD,Clement Wangerin.

Afternoon workshop sessions focused on setting key priorities for the City Region and the need for an integrated Digital Strategy to deliver the Metro Mayor’s ambition. A key theme was the need to build on the City Region’s positive international brand, and trade on the success of its already successful cluster of tech companies, innovation programmes and its cutting-edge research and development assets.

Carl Wong CEO of Living Lens – a Liverpool soft-ware company who also have a growing business base in the US said:
“Liverpool businesses need to be more ambitious and focus on being the best in the world not just the best in this City Region. We have a great talent-pool and also a great global brand that we should be willing to shout about. The further you go in the world, the stronger our creative reputation.”

The event was sponsored by the LCR Activate programme, a three year ERDF-funded project which seeks to help companies in the Liverpool City Region Digital and Creative sector.