ICT
The South West of England is home to the
largest microelectronics sector in Europe. There are more silicon
designers here than anywhere in the world outside the US - up to
50% more than the next largest cluster which is in Cambridge. The
knowledge and expertise in this region is second only to Silicon
Valley.
It is this concentration of talent that has earned the South
West's M4 corridor the title of Silicon Gorge. Among the world
class companies located here are STMicroelectronics, Motorola and
Toshiba, all of which are involved in leading edge R&D, such as
Motorola's work on LTE.
Global impact
The work being done here in the South West has a
truly global impact. Silicon designers create the microchips that
go inside every single electronic device and estimates put the
world's electronic device market at around £2 trillion a year. The
South West's dynamic silicon design sector is growing rapidly.
Start-ups in the region have succeeded in attracting hundreds of
millions of pounds in venture capital in recent years: since 2004,
five local start-ups alone have secured in excess of $250 million
(Source: Calibre One). Prestigious names like Icera,
picoChip and Clearspeed have all emerged from this region and many
of the world's leading semiconductor companies have established a
presence here to tap into the South West's rich seam of engineering
talent.
Innovation
This spirit of innovation in the South West is
not new. The groundbreaking work of companies like Inmos in Bristol
and GEC-Plessey Semiconductor in Swindon trained a generation of
silicon designers and, while the organisations themselves have
changed beyond recognition, their legacy lives on. In the 1980s,
Professor David May from the University of Bristol's Faculty of
Computer Science was lead architect for the Transputer, the
microprocessor design which changed the face of modern-day
computing. His colleague, Professor Joe McGeehan from the
Department of Communications Engineering, pioneered the technology
that would subsequently lead to the development of mobile
communications.
Strengths
Today, world class engineering and creative
skills converge to make this region one of the most fertile
breeding grounds for innovative technologies. The South West is
particularly strong in wireless communication technologies,
photonics, software, information storage and security. And there
are also, exciting pockets of growth in robotics and biometrics.
The Bristol Robotics Laboratory - the largest of its kind in the UK
- leads the field in bio-engineering and intelligent autonomous
systems and OC Robotics, which is the leading commercial
manufacturer of snake-arm robots in the world, won the 2009 Queen's
Award for Enterprise in the Innovation category. In Exeter, the
MetOffice - which provides global environmental and weather
services - uses one of the most powerful computers in the
world.
Support
Industry support is provided by Silicon South West - a dedicated
electronics sector support organisation which offers networking
opportunities and resources to support growth and innovation. It
has more than 500 active members and among its support services is
FASTtrack, a new programme to accelerate high-growth potential
companies by providing customer contacts, mentoring and networking
tailored to their needs. It is just one of the ways that the South
West is continuing to ensure its place at the forefront of ICT
developments worldwide.
For more information about investing in the South West of
England, contact Head of Inward Investment Ellen Stallins.