£15m transformation fund for manufacturing businesses and jobs to grow the West Midlands economy
Published: Thursday 09 Oct 2025
Hundreds of manufacturing businesses are to get expert support and funding to help them capitalise on a new wave of economic opportunities, driven in part by the flagship West Midlands Investment Zone.
SMEs already based here can now apply to join the WM Investment Zone Supply Chain Transition programme on the Business Growth West Midlands website.
The programme is backed by £12.5 million secured for the sector from government by Mayor Richard Parker and the West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA).
It will create and safeguard thousands of jobs by helping businesses pivot into high-growth, tech-driven advanced manufacturing markets set out in the region’s Growth Plan and the government’s Industrial Strategy.
These include advanced engineering, electric vehicles and battery technology, clean tech and energy, health and medical tech, aerospace, and digital technologies.
Growth in these sectors is already building momentum and will be turbocharged by the Investment Zone’s three key sites in Coventry and Warwick, Birmingham, and Wolverhampton.
The WMCA is providing an additional £2.5 million of Investment Zone funding for skills training and routes to apprenticeships to make sure local people can make the most of these new job opportunities.
Richard Parker, Mayor of the West Midlands, said: “Manufacturing is still the beating heart of the West Midlands economy, it’s in our DNA. But we’re ever evolving as technology transforms what we make and how we make it.
“It’s essential to modernise production, upskill our workforce, and support business leaders with the training, funding, and guidance they need to be at the cutting edge of 21st century clean and high-tech industries.
“Opportunities are coming in this new era for manufacturing. And we’re making sure businesses and local people are ready to seize the moment so we can protect and create more high-quality jobs. This is a chance to reclaim our status as the workshop of the world.”
The Supply Chain Transition programme, funded with money earmarked to deliver the region's Investment Zone, will give businesses fully funded practical advice, access to a £6 million research and development grant fund, and advanced management training for senior leaders.
The first year of the programme will be delivered by Supply Smarter West Midlands.
The consortium is led by C&W Business Solutions, Manufacturing Technology Centre, WMG at University of Warwick, and the three partners of the West Midlands Combined Universities Partnership (WMCU), Birmingham City University, Coventry University and University of Wolverhampton.
All have extensive, industry-relevant expertise spanning advanced manufacturing research, development, innovation and training.
Craig Humphrey, CEO of CW Growth Hub Group, which includes C&W Business Solutions, said: “The Supply Smarter West Midlands Consortium brings together a power-house combination of the region’s world-class advanced manufacturing and engineering research and development facilities and specialists at WMG and the MTC, with highly experienced and knowledgeable sector experts from the West Midlands Combined Universities, to deliver this transformational programme.
“Following the launch of the regional Growth Plan and government’s new Industrial Strategy it will enable West Midlands SMEs to build resilience, strengthen sustainable local supply chains and win new customers. They will also get help to develop cutting-edge innovations in new, emerging and growing sectors to help solve industry’s decarbonisation challenges.”
The Supply Chain Transition programme will benefit businesses like long-established Birmingham-based precision engineering specialists Brandauer.
Rowan Crozier, Brandauer CEO, said: "Key to our new ten-year plan is a continued commitment to pushing the boundaries of innovation in manufacturing and we welcome any funding that helps firms explore new opportunities through carefully tailored R&D activities.
"In recent years, we have made significant progress in developing e-motor laminations for and, with the support of the Supply Chain Transition programme, we are hoping to use some of the assistance to accelerate our move into power storage and more advanced battery technology.
"The UK has a massive opportunity to drive the world in new mobility solutions and I'd love Birmingham and the West Midlands to lead the charge."
West Midlands Investment Zone, led by the Mayor and the WMCA, covers the whole region and is powered through the three specific sites.
Coventry-Warwick Gigapark at Coventry Airport, Birmingham Knowledge Quarter, and Wolverhampton Green Innovation Corridor are offering a range of incentives from tax breaks to direct funding to attract major new employers to the region, creating 30,000 jobs and driving in excess of £5.5 billion of new investment.
Around £1.5 billion of business rates over the Investment Zone’s 25-year lifespan will also be retained and reinvested in the region instead of going back into government coffers.
Find out more about the opportunities to be delivered by the West Midlands Investment Zone, and the supply chain transition programme, on the WMCA website.
Notes to editors
The three West Midlands Investment Zone sites are:
- The Coventry-Warwick Gigapark at Coventry Airport which will be anchored by a battery manufacturer and associated businesses in the electric vehicle supply chain. The site will get tax incentives, business rates retention and £23m investment for land remediation, infrastructure and connection to power grids.
- The Birmingham Knowledge Quarter which will run northeast from Birmingham City and Aston universities through Duddeston and Nechells to Aston, focussing on investment and jobs in the health and medical tech sector and also in wider digital technology capability. This site will offer tax incentives, business rates retention and receive £9m investment for public realm works and active travel infrastructure to help attract investment.
- The Wolverhampton Green Innovation Corridor which will support the transition to the emerging green sectors such as clean-tech, sustainable construction, cyber security and green engineering through a partnership between the City of Wolverhampton Council and University of Wolverhampton. It will link the university’s Springfield Campus and Science Park with £7m investment for land remediation and key infrastructure.
Further enquiries
For all other enquiries from members of the public go to our contact us page: https://www.wmca.org.uk/contact-us/