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Innovate UK puts £27m in offshore wind

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Innovate UK committed £27m to offshore-wind innovation on 16 June, anchored by a £12m shared testing centre on the Isle of Wight with Denmark's Vestas as its first industry partner.

TechnologyAssessed
Key takeaway

A shared composites centre on the Isle of Wight gives small suppliers the kit to build a cluster around.

Innovate UK committed £27m to offshore-wind innovation on Tuesday 16 June, money aimed squarely outside London 1. The package runs to a £10m innovation programme with winners due later in 2026, a £5m Wind Innovation Hub, and £12m for a Large Structures Innovation Centre (LSIC) at the National Composites Centre (NCC) on the Isle of Wight. Vestas, the Danish turbine maker, has signed on as the first industry partner to work on blade innovation.

A shared, open-access site for testing very large composite structures gives small suppliers access to machinery they could never justify buying alone, which is the mechanism by which a manufacturing cluster can form around a single anchor tenant rather than dispersing. Locate that facility on the Isle of Wight and the cluster grows on the coast, where the turbines are assembled and shipped, rather than in the capital.

The siting follows a wider regional instinct in how the state now spends. The same reflex sent £500m of innovation grants to seven city-region mayors, with the first £23.7m going to Liverpool , cutting Whitehall out of the allocation chain. Innovate UK has not yet named the startup-competition winners, the part of this package to watch, since that is where the £10m turns into companies rather than concrete.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Offshore wind turbines are getting bigger: the blades on the most powerful turbines now being built are longer than a football pitch. To certify that a blade is safe and will last for twenty years at sea, manufacturers need specialised testing facilities that can apply realistic forces to a full-size blade without breaking it. The UK currently lacks this capability for the largest blade sizes. On 16 June 2026, Innovate UK ; the government's innovation funding agency ; committed £27m to offshore-wind innovation. The most significant piece is a £12m investment in a Large Structures Innovation Centre at the National Composites Centre on the Isle of Wight. The Isle of Wight site is chosen partly because it has coastal access that makes it easier to transport very large components in and out. Vestas, a Danish company that is one of the world's biggest wind-turbine manufacturers, has signed up as the first industry partner to work on blade innovation at the new centre. The goal is to help UK suppliers develop and certify the components needed for the next generation of offshore wind turbines, rather than leaving that work to manufacturers based abroad.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The offshore-wind supply-chain problem has a specific structural cause: UK manufacturing capacity was not built during the first three Crown Estate rounds because the contracts were too short and too small to justify factory investment. Danish and German manufacturers who had invested in scale production for their domestic markets won UK contracts by default, because UK manufacturers could not compete on unit economics without the scale advantages those foreign incumbents already had.

The Isle of Wight site has geographic logic. Offshore wind installation requires coastal access for blade and tower transport; the island's existing marine infrastructure and proximity to Round 4 development zones in the English Channel gives a manufacturing and testing cluster at this location industrial-logistics advantages that an inland composites facility does not.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    An open-access large-structures testing facility on the Isle of Wight gives UK composite manufacturers the certification capability needed to bid on Crown Estate Round 4 and Dogger Bank Phase 3 blade contracts from 2027 onwards.

  • Risk

    Vestas as the anchor industry partner risks the LSIC primarily serving a Danish OEM rather than developing UK supply-chain capacity, which would invert the public investment rationale.

First Reported In

Update #9 · Private money rebuilds Britain's seed tier

UKRI· 24 Jun 2026
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This Event
Innovate UK puts £27m in offshore wind
A shared open-access facility lets small suppliers reach equipment they could never buy alone, the precondition for a manufacturing cluster forming around one anchor tenant.
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