Manufacturing & Supply Chain

Dublin Belfast Economic Corridor launched

 Breaking News

Dublin Belfast Economic Corridor launched

Dublin Belfast Economic Corridor launched
April 01
09:46 2021
Spread the love

Fingal County Council is one of eight local authorities from either side of the border which came together recently to launch the Dublin Belfast Economic Corridor in response to challenges facing the region, which have been identified by a joint report from Dublin City University and Ulster University. The eight local authorities are:

  • Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council
  • Belfast City Council
  • Dublin City Council
  • Fingal County Council
  • Lisburn & Castlereagh City Council
  • Louth County Council
  • Meath County Council
  • Newry, Mourne and Down District Council

The report, The Dublin-Belfast Economic Corridor: Current Profile, Potential for Recovery & Opportunities for Cooperation, states that this is an opportune time to create a north-south Economic Corridor given the challenges the region faces as it comes to terms with the impact of the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union and the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Mayor of Fingal, Cllr David Healy said: “Opportunities exist to grow indigenous business, establish clusters of key sectors, leverage the appetite for collaboration and use the Corridor as the driving force for economic development in the region and nationally.”

In 2018, the eight Councils located along the Corridor and the two Universities came together to work collectively to find ways of realising the potential benefits of further development of the Corridor. This led to the establishment of a Partnership Steering Group made up of the eight Council Chief Executives and the Presidents of the two universities who committed to meeting quarterly.

The Steering Group’s immediate objective is to leverage the network’s resources in areas which can have a positive impact and add significant value to the economic development of the region at a time of great economic and social uncertainty.

A working group of local government and university staff was subsequently formed and tasked with developing a series of cooperative initiatives and projects to begin to realise this objective. The report published today is the first output of their collective work over the past three years.

A website, www.dbec.info, has been established as has a presence on social media with the creation of a Twitter account, @DBECIreland, and a LinkedIn account.

Following the launch and the publication of the Report, the next step will be to establishing working governance structures which will balance oversight and day to day activity. Oversight will be provided by an Oversight and Governance Board. This will comprise of 24 councillors, three from each Council, and they will shortly hold their first meeting to elect a Chair and develop a programme of works. Fingal County Council will be represented on the Board by Cllr David Healy, Cllr Tony Murphy and Cllr Howard Mahony

There is awareness among all those involved in the Dublin Belfast Economic Corridor Project that developing a strong ethos of co-operation will require time, energy and support. Objectives will be set for achievement in the medium to long-term and based on a realisation that local actions can deliver strategic objectives in a practical way.

The Chief Executive of Fingal County Council, AnnMarie Farrelly, said: “There is awareness among all those involved in the Dublin Belfast Economic Corridor Project that developing a strong ethos of co-operation will require time, energy and support. Objectives will be set for achievement in the medium to long-term and based on a realisation that local actions can deliver strategic objectives in a practical way.”

The region has a population in excess of 2 million people and is younger and more diverse than any other part of Ireland with 15% born off the island. It also has the best educated workforce with 34% of the population holding Third Level qualifications thereby creating an excellent pipeline for concentrations of jobs requiring graduates.

In 2019, there were 125,000 firms located along the Corridor with entrepreneurship and survival rates higher than elsewhere in Ireland and more people employed in mid-sized and large businesses than anywhere else.

Key sectors along the Corridor include Advanced Manufacturing, ICT, Agri-Food, Professional Services, Financial Services, Constructions and Tourism while among the challenges facing the region in the coming years are adapting to Brexit, Climate Change and transformation to a low carbon economy, low population density and an ageing population.


Warning: count(): Parameter must be an array or an object that implements Countable in /home/manufacturingsup/public_html/wp-content/themes/legatus-theme/includes/single/post-tags.php on line 5

About Author

mike

mike

Related Articles



 

New Subscriber

    Subscribe Here



    Advertisements
















    National Manufacturing Conference & Exhibition 2020

    NIBRT Springboard Success Stories