21 February 2024
Freeman calls for closer DfE & DSIT joint working on skills for the high growth innovation economy

George Freeman highlights the huge potential of the innovation economy in creating hundreds of thousands of new tech jobs, in clusters all around the country, and calls on the Department for Education to work with the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology to ensure job creation plans are built into local skills improvement plans on the ground.

Space Industry Skills Gap

George Freeman (Mid Norfolk) (Con)

3. What steps her Department is taking to tackle the space industry skills gap. (901499)

The Minister for Science, Research and Innovation (Andrew Griffith)

Delivering a national space strategy is a key priority for me and the Department. I recognise that a strong space workforce is critical to this, and my hon. Friend will be pleased to know that we will be publishing a space workforce action plan later this year.

George Freeman 

I am grateful to my hon. Friend for his answer and for his work on this. He knows, as I do, that the innovation economy in this country is creating hundreds of thousands of new jobs. Indeed, 500,000 are forecast over the next 10 years in space, agritech, cleantech engineering and bio, in clusters all around the country, as the recent cluster map showed. Will he ensure that the excellent Department for Education future skills unit liaises closely with the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology cluster team to make sure that we are properly building the job creation plans into the local skills improvement plans on the ground?

Andrew Griffith 

My hon. Friend has done so much to advance the interests of skills in the sector during his many years of public service, and he is quite right to draw attention to the successful cluster map that was launched by the Secretary of State 10 days ago. The development of skills is a shared responsibility between Government and industry and we take our responsibilities in that respect very seriously.

Hansard