Today (28 September) the Mayor and Tees Valley Combined Authority Cabinet has signed off a multi-million pound investment which will bring a revolutionary metals project to Redcar.
The £4.6 million investment will allow Liberty Powder Metals, owned by Liberty House, to develop and manufacture speciality alloy metal powders for uses like 3D printing car parts.
The overall cost of the scheme is £9.83 million, with almost £4 million coming from Liberty and the CASCADE project, a Research and Development initiative funded by the UK Government and led by Liberty.
The project will be based at the Materials Processing Institute in South Bank, enabling Liberty to access the scientific expertise available at the Institute which is a not-for-profit research and innovation centre supporting industry to develop new materials, processes and technologies. The atomiser, a key part of the scheme, will be set up on an open access basis and will enable collaborative research programmes. There are currently only two such atomisers in the UK.
Liberty expects the market for speciality alloy metal powders to grow rapidly and aims to secure a share in the international market for it, using Tees Valley-based facilities.
Mayor Houchen chairs the Cabinet and following the meeting, said: “This investment will give Teesside the chance to compete in a potentially huge new global market. Staying ahead of the curve on new technologies like speciality metal powders, and the 3D printed products they’re used in, could create a whole new industrial cluster and many jobs for local workers.
“The fact that a company as big as Liberty has chosen to bring this project to the Tees Valley shows that we are a real magnet for research and development and foreign direct investment.
“It just shows that if we keep backing our job creators, innovators, entrepreneurs and risk takers, private investment will flood into our area to develop future-proof industries like this one.”
Jon Bolton, Chief Executive of Liberty Steel UK said: “As a group we are committed to revitalising the metals and engineering industry through innovation and we’re very proud to partner with the Tees Valley Combined Authority and the Materials Processing Institute to take forward a game-changing technology that will build a bright new future for these sectors in the UK and worldwide.”
Chris McDonald, Chief Executive Officer of Materials Processing Institute added: “The Institute can bring a high level of scientific expertise to this project with our capabilities in advanced materials and we are delighted to support Liberty in the next phase of its powder metals project which is essential for the continued development and refinement of additive manufacturing processes.