Dales businesswomen get new leaders to drive innovation in rural communities

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A network to connect business women across the Yorkshire Dales and help drive forward innovation in the county’s rural communities has been relaunched. The Dales Business Women group brings together professional, entrepreneurial and self-employed women in and around the Dales and surrounding areas, offering support and advice. Set up seven years ago, the group now has two new women at its helm. Photographer Katy Howe has joined forces with North Yorkshire Council’s senior economic development officer, Alison Laws to run the network from this week Mrs Howe said: “North Yorkshire has such a great resource of like-minded women, who are passionate about achieving their goals. “In this region, there is a perception that there are few business opportunities, a position that Dales Business Women aims to shift. The Yorkshire Dales and the surrounding areas are full of entrepreneurial and industrious women who are making a difference.” Cllr Carl Les, the leader of the council, said: “Groups like Dales Business Women are vital as a way of meeting, sharing thoughts and ideas and helping businesses to grow and flourish. “Connecting with people in the rural areas can be more difficult so we support any organisation that helps that to happen.” The FSB’s development manager for York and North Yorkshire, Carolyn Frank, said she is delighted to see the relaunch of the group. She said: “Having a local network is so important to a small business, from expanding your contacts and finding new opportunities, to accessing local business advice, but most of all building strong and authentic relationships to support you through the ups and downs of business life. “This is a super friendly and proactive group and a key organisation for women in enterprise in North Yorkshire.  We know when women in business collaborate magic always happens, and we look forward to hearing about the network supercharging local businesses going forward.” Subscriptions will be £10 per month with meetings being initially held on the first Wednesday of every month from 11.30am until 1.30pm.

Europe’s largest independent gas turbine service provider moves to Teal Park

Gas Turbine Services has signed a new lease on 13,347 sq ft of industrial accommodation on Teal Park on Lincoln’s Whisby Road. The firm is moving from its current Leafbridge Business Park premises to Teal Park – regarded as the epicentre of industrial gas turbine maintenance in the Lincoln area. The move to Teal Park follows identification by the business, two years ago, that its Leafbridge Business Park facility would limit future expansion, not only in engine throughput but also in responsiveness to the ongoing changes and competitive demands of the energy market. The new base at Teal Park sees Gas Turbine Services move to a facility which was originally built and designed for the express purpose of gas turbine support & maintenance and, according to Robert Dye, Technical Director and co-owner, the new base means a swift and seamless transition to meet the company’s current and future expansion requirements. He said: “For our specific sector specialisation, there was never any question of relocating outside of the Lincoln area – especially taking into account the wealth of local expertise and knowledge as we recruit and expand our business.” Eddison’s Director William Wall, who led the property deal on behalf of the landlord, added: “Gas turbines are one of the long-established specialisms of the manufacturing sector in Lincoln and the surrounding area.” “The county’s position on the map, with access to the east coast ports and a road network to the engineering hinterland of the East Midlands, makes it a prime location for operators in the energy sector.” Gas Turbine Services, part of the Anglo-Danish HKJ Group, was established more than 30 years ago. Headquartered in Esbjerg, Denmark, it has been operationally based in the Lincoln area for the past 16 years.

Forgemasters’ charity football event raises more than £2,000

Sheffield Forgemasters is pleased to announce its annual Charity Football Tournament raised a record-breaking amount for Suppport Dogs! Donations for this year’s event amounted to £2,124.50 for Support Dogs – Sheffield Forgemasters’ highest amount of football fundraising so far. These generous donations, mostly from our employees, contractors, their friends and families, have brought our total for Support Dogs to £17,993.94 in pursuit of our £20,000 target – the cost of training one specialist dog to assist people with epilepsy, physical disability and children with autism. The tournament, hosted at the Sheffield Olympic Legacy Park Community Stadium, saw ten teams from across Sheffield Forgemasters play in a great spirit of healthy competition.

Yorkshire Water creates alliance to protect 140,000 businesses from storm overflows

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Yorkshire Water has created a Storm Overflow Alliance to deliver up to £1bn of capital investment in AMP8. The alliance is a significant and strategic partnership between Yorkshire Water, AtkinsRéalis, Morrison Water Services, Stantec, and Ward & Burke. Yorkshire Water serves more than five million customers and 140,000 businesses, in addition to millions of visitors to Yorkshire each year, and covers an area of around 12,000 square kilometres. The establishment of the Alliance represents a bold commitment to addressing storm overflow discharges and the associated environmental impacts on river and coastal waters. The alliance will be a truly integrated, high performing industry leading team that will deliver high quality sustainable solutions and world class performance for Yorkshire Water as it undertakes its ambitious investment plans for the next five years. The plans, which are currently awaiting approval from Ofwat, could see over £1bn being invested to reduce storm overflow operation in the region. The contract will run throughout the AMP8 period for an initial period of five years, with the option to extend for another five. As a dedicated organisation, the Alliance will collaboratively provide comprehensive engineering solutions, including strategic planning, design, management, and delivery of critical infrastructure. It will explore opportunities from increased storage capacity within wastewater treatment works, to smarter sewer network operations – with a key focus on blue-green solutions. The partnership has a shared commitment to sustainability, to protect and enhance the environment, and to create social value. By prioritising local employment and engaging local supply chain partners with a focus on low carbon materials and construction methods, the Alliance will further support the communities within Yorkshire Water’s service area. It will also ensure efficiencies, so customers see value for money in the work that is being done. Jon Stokes, Head of Storm Overflow Alliance at Yorkshire Water commented: “We’re really excited to get started with our ambitious plans for the next five years. We know we need to do more to improve our network, and this new partnership will help us to deliver our largest ever environmental investment which will create a significant step change in how we operate. Our storm overflows operate more often than we, and our customers, would like. This new partnership will help change that and bring wider benefits to the region such as more jobs and more green spaces for our communities.” Commenting on behalf of the partner executives, Iain Sutherland, Managing Director of M Group Services’ Water Division said: “We are proud to be part of the Yorkshire Water Storm Overflow Alliance alongside AtkinsRéalis, Stantec and Ward & Burke, a collaboration committed to delivering tangible, lasting improvements to Yorkshire’s wastewater infrastructure. Together we’ll enhance the region’s storm overflows and the surrounding infrastructure and systems. This will play a key role in transforming river and coastal water quality, as well as the ecosystems they support. “By adopting innovative technologies and sustainable practices, we aim to ensure that the benefits of this investment are felt for generations, fostering a healthier environment and a stronger future for the region.”

Greater Lincolnshire’s devolution deal gets the green light

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Devolution for Greater Lincolnshire is to go ahead, bringing together North East Lincolnshire, North Lincolnshire, and Lincolnshire County Council together as the Greater Lincolnshire Combined County Authority. It’s expected that devolution will progress through its final legislative stage to allow the forming of the new authority before the Mayoral election next May. The Leader of North East Lincolnshire Council, Cllr Philip Jackson said: “I am sure I share the sentiments of the Leaders of Lincolnshire County Council and North Lincolnshire Council, when I say this is the best possible news we could have hoped for. Months and months of dedicated hard work and effort has been put into creating a vision for Greater Lincolnshire that will offer a cohesive approach – allowing this region to grow and prosper. “Our deal was supported by the last Government with millions of pounds of funding agreed to be devolved down to our new Greater Lincolnshire Combined County Authority to ensure we would be able to truly invest in our key priority areas, which will underpin our positive way forward. “I am therefore delighted that Greater Lincolnshire devolution continues to have the support of the country’s new Government and I now look forward to continuing our journey towards more local control with funding and powers handed to those who are closer to the communities they serve. We have a chance to make a real difference.” Lincolnshire County Council Leader Martin Hill said: “This is great news and I’m pleased we are able to move forward with devolution to deliver growth in Greater Lincolnshire. We have always been clear that strengthening local decision-making where we consider the needs and wants of our communities, will give the best results for residents and businesses. “It’s clear that having a Mayoral Combined Authority will give us the ability to liaise directly with the government about what is best for our residents and be able to achieve our ambitious plans more quickly. The decision to take this forward reflects our strong partnership work with North Lincolnshire and North East Lincolnshire councils, and the hard work we have all put in to making sure it’s the right deal for our area.” Cllr Rob Waltham of North Lincolnshire Council, said: “Our £720m deal was supported by thousands of residents and has been on the table for years and negotiated earlier this year. At last, we can get to work on seizing this monumental opportunity – bringing better paid jobs to the area, boosting skills, expanding local infrastructure and enhancing our environment across Lincolnshire. “We will continue to strengthen ties across our great historic county – I am incredibly proud to have been born, educated and lived and worked in Lincolnshire for most of my life and to have 10 generations of my family living throughout Lincolnshire.  We are a great county full of inspirational people who deserve the best opportunities for them and their families as we seek to level up Lincolnshire to deliver a better quality of life for local residents.” The financial Deal remains the same as finalised between the three lead authorities and the previous Government, with a total investment fund of three-quarters of a billion pounds over the next 30 years. This includes an annual £24m Mayoral Investment Fund to invest in priority areas of jobs and skills; housing & highways, transport, the environment and nature, net zero, digital improvements, and innovation and trade. There is also an initial capital funding pot of £28m including brownfield funding for individual schemes across Greater Lincolnshire. In North East Lincolnshire this will support the phase one development of a Grimsby Town Centre Transport Hub, along with the new housing scheme for the town’s Alexandra Dock.

B2B suppliers starting to offer longer payment terms, finds new report

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One in six B2B suppliers are offering their business customers over two months to pay their invoices as a route to securing sales  – twice as many who offered such terms in 2020.

That’s the finding in a new joint report from economic consultancy Cebr and lender iwoca, which reveals the number of suppliers offering repayment terms over 60 days to customers has surged from just 7% of suppliers in 2020 to 17% this year.

This comes as more businesses are asking for payment flexibility from their suppliers, says the report. More than eight in 10 suppliers say they have to adjust payment terms for business customers, nearly twice  the rate four years ago.

Changes are having to be made to secure sales, as two in three B2B sellers report that offering trade credit increased their number of sales. Three out of four (75%) suppliers offer longer repayment terms for loyal or large customers, or for bigger orders.

On the other side of the deal, nearly half of surveyed business customers reported avoiding using a supplier, or considering doing so, due to short or non-existent payment terms.

The report, called Credit Where It’s Due, says the change is a welcome trend for buyers, outstanding payments in 2024 are more common than they were at the height of the pandemic. Nearly half of UK suppliers serving business customers are now owed in excess of £10,000 from their trade customers, up 13pp from 2020 levels. A third of suppliers are very confident that their invoices will be repaid, but fewer than one in three (29%) are ‘very confident’ in assessing customers’ creditworthiness.

iwocaPay co-Lead Lara Gilman said: “The sector has always talked about payment terms in the context of big corporations trampling over small ones. But since the pandemic it’s clear that across the board, firms – including SMEs – are now calling for flexibility from their suppliers to keep business moving.”

Christopher Breen, Head of Economic Insight at Cebr said: “Trade credit continues to be an important tool in B2B transactions, offering buyers the flexibility to purchase now and pay later. However, it presents challenges for suppliers, such as late payments and the potential accumulation of bad debt. “Despite these risks, an overwhelming majority of B2B suppliers offer some form of payment terms, recognising the importance of trade credit in securing sales. The already widespread use of trade credit systems presents an opportunity for them to be modernised by the use of digital solutions, which could help both suppliers and customers to navigate these financial pressures effectively.”

York Handmade secures hat-trick of National Trust commissions

York Handmade Brick Company has landed a hat-trick of prestigious commissions from the National Trust. York Handmade, based at Alne, near Easingwold, is suppling bricks for Little Moreton Hall in Congleton, Cheshire, Dunham Massey in Altrincham and Goddards in Tadcaster Road, York. The three Trust properties are currently being renovated. Mark Laksevics of York Handmade said: “We are tremendously proud to be playing such a pivotal role in the appearance and construction of three of the National Trust’s most distinctive properties in the north of England. “Our relationship with the National Trust has blossomed this year, which is allowing us to manufacture and showcase our finest special bricks. These bricks perfectly complement the unique character of all three properties and merge seamlessly with their historic appearance.” Little Moreton Hall is an iconic moated and half-timbered Tudor manor house with a quirky character and gorgeous gardens. The National Trust has been restoring two historic chimney stacks this year, with the help of York Handmade. John Evans of the National Trust explained: “The repointing of the chimney stacks at Little Moreton Hall required replacement bricks and, as York Handmade are widely known in the conservation sector for their handmade bricks, they were the obvious choice to help us with this project. “The company provided four different blends and sizes of bricks for this project, which has been completed successfully. They have been very helpful and great to work with and I would heartily recommend them.” Meanwhile Dunham Massey Hall is a magnificent 17th century English country house, near Altrincham, Greater Manchester. It boasts a walled garden for all seasons, an ancient deer park and a house filled with treasures from the last four centuries. Paula Baron of the National Trust explained: “We are using York Handmade’s bricks on the chimney of the Coach House and on two barns on the wider 300-acre estate. The work will be completed by the end of this year, weather permitting. We have ordered a constant supply of York Handmade’s brick to ensure we don’t run out. “The open texture of their bricks was a good match and perfect for this project. We have built up an excellent relationship and we had a wonderful behind the scenes tour of York Handmade’s factory when we came over to York for the day. They couldn’t have been more accommodating.” Finally, York Handmade has just begun supplying bricks for the restoration of Goddards, one of York’s finest private houses, situated in Tadcaster Road, close to York Racecourse. An Arts and Crafts house, it was built in 1927 for Noel and Kathleen Terry of the famed chocolate-manufacturing family Terry’s. It was designed by the great York architect Walter Brierley and was acquired by The National Trust in 1984. Mark Laksevics concluded: “It has been a joy to work with the National Trust on these projects. The role the Trust plays in conservation and enhancing the UK’s heritage is absolutely crucial and for us, as a company, to support the Trust in this role is both deeply satisfying and humbling. We hope this special relationship continues for many years to come.”

Adtran expands UK operations with York distribution center

Adtran has opened a new 20,000-square-foot distribution center in York. The facility expands Adtran’s UK operations, supporting the deployment of its end-to-end fiber infrastructure solutions, including optical transport, Carrier Ethernet and access equipment. By enhancing logistics capabilities, the new center will enable faster delivery of essential network components. It will support a wide array of services, such as testing, production and customization of hardware and software. The facility also underscores Adtran’s commitment to sustainability and the highest standards of environmental performance. Paulus Bucher, senior VP of global operations at Adtran, said: “Our new distribution center is designed to meet the demands of the UK’s rapidly expanding fiber broadband network. For over 20 years, York has been central to our UK strategy, serving as a vital hub that allows us to efficiently support service providers across the country. “This new facility builds on that strong foundation, enabling faster, more cost-effective and more sustainable deployments to ensure high-speed broadband reaches both major cities and remote rural areas across the UK. “From our York campus, we’re providing service providers of all sizes with the tools they need to build and expand fiber infrastructure. Through our comprehensive portfolio of networking equipment, from optical transport and Carrier Ethernet to residential solutions, we’re ensuring they can deliver high-speed, reliable connectivity from the core and through the door.”
The new distribution center, Sovereign House, has earned an “excellent” rating from the Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method, highlighting its top-tier environmental performance. “Sovereign House is part of our strategy to strengthen our supply chain and ensure resilience against disruptions. By centralizing logistics, we’re able to enhance efficiency and speed up the delivery of essential broadband technologies to our UK customers,” said Stuart Broome, GM of EMEA sales at Adtran. “This facility will enable service providers to roll out multigigabit fiber and AI-driven solutions more rapidly, allowing them to seize new market opportunities and better serve their communities nationwide. With sustainability and power efficiency at the core of its design, Sovereign House also reinforces our commitment to environmentally responsible operations.”

Company importing through Humber docks takes space at East Yorkshire business park

A Hull company which imports products through the Humber Docks to be distributed to customers in West Yorkshire has taken space at one of East Yorkshire’s biggest business sites. Humber Storage Solutions are now permanent tenants of Units 7 and 8 at Dianthus Business Park, in Newport. It will see the business benefit from having 136,000 sq ft of industrial space, situated a short distance from Hull, Immingham and Goole Docks, and with immediate access to the A63 and onto the A1 and M62 across the country. The deal to secure the property was handled by Garness Jones. Senior Surveyor Chris Hyam says: “This is a fantastic location for Humber Storage Solutions and will really aid their business activities as they store and distribute products imported through the Humber Docks, which are then transported down the motorway to a facility for a major international client in West Yorkshire. “In terms of businesses operating in this kind of market, Dianthus Business Park is hard to beat for location, whilst also offering first-class facilities.” Dianthus Business Park has been through significant development and expansion since it was first built as a home for JZ Flowers in 2010.

Leeds leather exporter welcomes Government’s new online insurance portal

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The MD of a Leeds-based leather supplier Yarwood Leather has welcomed a new online Government portal for companies applying for government-backed export insurance. Yarwood Leather, which has been supplying the automotive, aviation, and marine industries for more than 50 years, has been one of the first to secure government insurance through the new portal, using the support to help it deliver major new contracts supplying material to furniture makers in Vietnam. MD Kate Dixon of said: “Yarwood Leather have been in business and exporting for over 50 years. The support from UKEF has opened up new markets for us in territories which are not covered by our usual credit insurer.” The government’s export credit agency UKEF has launched the new online portal for credit insurance applications, which means that for the first time businesses can apply for government export insurancewithout having to complete a PDF form, improving access to international trading opportunities. Its said that the new portal significantly shortens the application process, making it easier for businesses to apply for and ultimately get the support they need to export. UKEF’s export insurance product has protected hundreds of exporters from non-payment risk, giving them the confidence to deliver high-value export contracts. This is particularly valuable for SMEs, which may face greater challenges securing private-sector finance. Around 75% of UKEF’s insurance policies last year supported SMEs, mostly in manufacturing, construction and retail sectors. Gareth Thomas, Minister for Exports, said: “Exporting can help businesses to grow more quickly and is a driver of UK economic growth. This is why the new government is asking UKEF to take action to make exporting easier and more accessible.

“This new online service makes it easier than ever before for SMEs to apply for export insurance, giving them the confidence to take on new contracts around the world.”