Business£5.5m manufacturing centre to contribute to UK's net zero targets

£5.5m manufacturing centre to contribute to UK’s net zero targets

SCOTLAND’S new £5.5m manufacturing centre in Glasgow aims to contribute to the UK’s net zero ambitions and drive economic growth.

The ReMake Value Retention Centre (RVRC) will be located within the National Manufacturing Institute Scotland (NMIS) and the University of Strathclyde, which operates NMIS in partnership with the University of Exeter and the University of Sheffield.

The RVRC aims to contribute to net zero ambitions by promoting circular economy practices to reduce waste and emissions, the centre could help reshore supply chains and unlock new opportunities for manufacturers.

The RVRC will focus on ‘high integrity’ sectors critical to national infrastructure including aerospace, marine, wind, nuclear, industrial, and power generation.

The centre will adopt a system-wide approach, addressing challenges through business models, policies, standards, culture, skills, and investment along with metallic and composite-based circular manufacturing technology and inspection processes.

The new centre is looking to explore how components such as aeroplane structures, energy systems, and industrial equipment can be reused or remade, aiming to keep products at their highest value instead of sending them to landfill.

NMIS employee
National Manufacturing Institute Scotland (NMIS), credit: Frame

Professor Sir Jim McDonald, principal & vice-chancellor of the University Strathclyde, said: “The establishment of the ReMake Value Retention Centre is a significant milestone for the UK’s journey to net zero.

“This centre will bring critical circular economy practices to the forefront of manufacturing, helping to reduce waste, cut emissions, and create sustainable, high-value jobs across Scotland and the UK.

“By pioneering reuse, repair, and remanufacture in sectors essential to our national infrastructure, we are not only addressing urgent environmental challenges but also securing economic resilience for the future.

“This investment underscores the power of collaboration across academia, industry, and government to drive meaningful change on a national and global scale.

NMIS, operated by the University of Strathclyde allows industry, the public sector, and academics to work together to create new research in the manufacturing world to transform productivity levels, make companies more competitive, and boost the skills of current and future workforce.

Stephen Fitzpatrick, director of the Digital Factory at NMIS, said: “The RVRC will tackle one of the biggest current manufacturing challenges and bring significant economic impact to the UK.

“We’re decoupling economic growth from negative environmental impact and expect this work will grow local businesses, reshore supply chains, and launch new manufacturing companies.

Focusing solely on the energy transition won’t achieve net zero since a large portion of global emissions comes from extracting and processing manufacturing materials.

“To mitigate the projected 500 million tonnes of material demand that we will need to dig out of the Earth over the next decade, we must embrace a circular economy, reusing materials and remaking existing products.

This challenge requires collaboration across industries and organisations.

“The RVRC will drive system-level change, making reuse, remaking, and repurposing viable for critical sectors.”

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