A progressive new partnership between the innovation clusters in Cambridge and Manchester aims to boost investment in both cities and across the UK.

The alliance will draw on the strengths of both cities to help them accelerate the scale-up of businesses and create new local jobs in sectors critical to the UK’s future prosperity.

Innovate Cambridge, established by Cambridge Enterprise, Cambridge Innovation Capital and Cambridge University to champion the cluster’s innovation ecosystem and ID Manchester – a JV between The University of Manchester and Bruntwood SciTech and set to become a world-class innovation district – have launched a strategic partnership to build on the existing links between the S & T hotspots.

The collaboration, starting this month will connect Manchester’s rapidly growing tech scene, the UK’s largest outside London and the South East (Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport, 2022) to Cambridge’s established ecosystem, which last month, was named the most intensive science and technological cluster in the world for a second year running by the Global Innovation Index.

Despite the geographical distance between them, the cities already have a close relationship in this space. Major science and tech firms co-locate in both city regions including life sciences giant AstraZeneca, chip designer Arm and global streaming platform Roku.

The University of Cambridge and The University of Manchester have strong ties, including collaborating on major national research and development initiatives such as the Henry Royce Institute and the Productivity Institute. There are also strong links between the investment communities through Cambridge Angels and Manchester Angels.

The ambitious collaboration has the backing of the mayors of Greater Manchester and Cambridgeshire & Peterborough, Andy Burnham and Nik Johnson, as well as Manchester City Council leader Bev Craig and Cambridge City Council leader Mike Davey.

The first step in boosting links between the regions will include setting up physical hubs in both cities to strengthen and accelerate collaboration between researchers and entrepreneurs and act as a gateway to both ecosystems.

The partnership will also map the ecosystem of connections as it expands across academia, business and civic society, and work with the Department for Business and Trade, the Government’s Office for Investment and local partners to identify options for attracting joint inward investment and co-location opportunities.

Ironically, the unveiling of this joined-up initiative closely follows PM Rishi Sunak’s announcement to scrap the ‘missing link’ section of the HS2 rail project.

The Cambridge-Manchester tech cluster tie-up is the third major initiative featuring Cambridge University and co-innovators announced in recent days. The first of these was The Innovate Cambridge 2023 Summit – which is taking place today. And on Monday we revealed the flagship ‘Founders at the University of Cambridge’ programme, which has appointed former Tech Nation CEO Gerard Grech as its chief.

The maiden programme will support fresh rafts of alumni founders to start and scale a new wave of globally successful tech companies and leverage a rich heritage for the cluster.

And now this exciting Cambridge-Manchester alliance. Underpinning the partnership is a shared commitment from both cities to an inclusive innovation-led growth agenda, leveraging business and political leadership, and accelerating growth in critical sectors like AI, digital tech, advanced materials, and health and biotech.

The partnership is designed to accelerate economic growth locally, regionally and nationally, and translate world-leading research into new jobs.

In Cambridge, Manchester will find a hotbed of innovation and commercialisation, with 23 billion-dollar unicorn companies born in the city.

The University of Cambridge is also the number one university in the world for producing successful tech founders, ahead of the likes of Harvard and MIT, with over 500 alumni founders raising more than $10 million in funding.

In Manchester, Cambridge will benefit from the dynamism of Manchester’s growing innovation ecosystem.

Last year the city was recognised as the UK’s leading regional tech city (CBRE, 2022) and it’s also home to the fastest-growing university spin-out population in the UK (Beauhurst, 2023). The University of Manchester was recently named number 1 both in the UK and Europe, and second in the world for social and environmental impact (Times Higher Education Impact Rating, 2023).

It’s also the most popular university in the UK for undergraduate applications (UCAS 2021 cycle), and the most targeted university by the UK’s leading employers (The Graduate Market, 2023).

Innovate Cambridge was launched in 2022 as an ambitious Greater Cambridge initiative that aims to collectively agree on and define an inclusive vision for the future of Cambridge and its innovation ecosystem to be implemented over the next decade.

ID Manchester will see The University of Manchester’s former North Campus transformed into a four million square foot innovation district, combining the University’s world-class research strengths with the experience of Bruntwood SciTech, a 50:50 joint venture between Bruntwood and Legal & General, in delivering connected science and technology infrastructure.

Tabitha Goldstaub, Executive Director of Innovate Cambridge said: “Cambridge and Manchester have many established ties in the innovation space and deepening these connections is a win-win for both cities and the businesses operating in them. This collaborative effort leverages the respective strengths of both cities to ensure we are greater than the sum of our parts.”

Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham, added: “Greater Manchester and Cambridge are recognised globally as hubs for innovation. The partnership between ID Manchester and Innovate Cambridge can help us strengthen ties between our places, linking the pioneering research and outstanding businesses present in each.

“Our ambition is for Greater Manchester to be a high-growth, high-wage economy, where the opportunities created by innovation are accessible to all. By focusing on investment and business growth, this partnership supports that ambition.”

And Mayor of Cambridge and Peterborough, Dr Nik Johnson, said: “As a region, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough’s talents and innovations are matched only by our efforts and ambitions and we take great pride in being able to further our partnership with an equally well-resourced Greater Manchester.

“Being home to world-class academic and industrial institutions is as much a responsibility as it is an opportunity which this new venture signals our determination to live up to and realise.”