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Newcastle University chosen to be Siemens' top tier innovation partner

Shared interests in routes to net zero means Newcastle joins Siemens' new global Research and Innovation Ecosystems.

12 July 2022

Global technology giant Siemens has evolved its strategic engagement program with universities to include, for the first time, seven universities from the UK in the top tier of innovation partners for their new global Research and Innovation Ecosystems (RIE).

Made up of 16 regions around the world, two of which are in the UK, each ecosystem includes universities, Siemens companies, research institutes, catapult centres, innovation start-ups, creative individuals, business partners and customers, all collaborating to create, scale, and deliver ground-breaking technologies and services to market in the shortest possible time and with maximum impact.

Minister for Higher and Further Education Michelle Donelan said: “I am delighted to see Siemens’ UK partnering with some of the top universities from across the country. I have seen first-hand the cutting-edge technology on offer on campus. It is collaborative opportunities with industry, such as this, that will provide a blueprint for future innovation and opportunity”

Siemens employs some 40,800 people in research and development world-wide, 14% of its global workforce, invests €4.6 billion annually to drive innovation and files around 42,000 patents each year, making it one of the top innovative companies in the world.

Over the past 10 years, the company has developed a local network of external partners in its research and currently runs over 130 projects a year with UK universities.

The involvement in the Siemens RIE gives the selected universities priority access and maximum support in identifying, winning and executing local and global projects with Siemens, its customers, governments, institutions and other research commissioning and funding bodies.

Selected from 200 global universities considered because they share Siemens’ core interests in Digital Industries, Smart Infrastructure, eMobility and Core Technologies, the seven UK universities research remit is very broad:

  • decarbonisation with University of Birmingham
  • routes to net zero with Newcastle University
  • cybersecurity and data analysis with University of Oxford, University of Cambridge and University of Manchester
  • the future of manufacturing with University of Nottingham and University of Sheffield.

These universities now get priority access to the Siemens Open Innovation Platform, with identified real world challenges; access to Siemens industrial researchers and business leaders; tech mentoring and business contacts to support academic start-ups;  collaboration with customers and business partners to establish new relationships; groups created to jointly leverage funding opportunities; the possibility of international partnership building within and across the Siemens RIEs; and customized access to Siemens’ software and products for academic research and education. To facilitate the close collaboration between the universities and their RIEs, Siemens embed staff permanently at the universities and encourage the flow of interns and recruitment into their businesses.

The Universities are Siemens strategic partners, and each partner has a collaboration framework agreement in place to accelerate engagement in projects. These UK universities were assessed to be in the top 10 leading global institutions for one or more of the fields of interest to Siemens for collaboration.

Prof. Paul Beasley, Head of R&D UK at Siemens explains:  “Alongside traditional contract research, we work closely with our stakeholders around the world on innovation projects, in publicly funded research consortia and to explore multiple other individual collaboration formats. 

"We have world-class partnerships across a number of UK universities which, with the support by UKRI, collaborate on a wide range of multi-disciplinary projects producing innovative solutions, technologies and skills for the future.

"These projects will provide new insights and innovative solutions with wide ranging benefits for everyone. We strongly believe that innovation is best delivered by networks and collaboration is the key to success. We have now moved to make collaboration closer and with a wider group of interested parties.”

Professor Brian Walker, Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Research Strategy and Resources, Newcastle University, said: ‘’Newcastle University values its strategic partnership with Siemens as a flagship and a benchmark for other strategic relationships.

"Over many years, the Newcastle-Siemens partnership has underpinned excellent research and innovation, coupled with industry-leading experiences for our students, in areas ranging from energy systems integration to offshore wind and from electrification to data science. We are excited to see this relationship consolidated within a Siemens Research & Innovation Ecosystem and thereby connected with the actors with whom we can accelerate our contributions to net zero carbon.’’

Carl Ennis, CEO of Siemens UK and a Visiting Professor of Practice at Newcastle University, makes the point: “This is an important recognition by our global business that UK universities have a lot to offer in innovation, ingenuity and creativity. These universities have demonstrated that they are more than capable of leading and participating in collaborative projects locally and globally.”

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