awards dinner exhibition

Transcription

awards dinner exhibition
CONFERENCE
AWARDS DINNER
EXHIBITION
NATIONAL AWARDS DINNER,
EXHIBITION AND CONFERENCE
21-22 JULY 2014
BT Conference Centre, Kings Dock, Liverpool Waterfront L3 4FP
MADE IN THE UK
EXHIBITION
REGISTRATION
12
8
C2
CONFERENCES
The following schedule of conferences has been
designed to support the UK’s manufacturing
supply chain.
D2
D1
D4
D6
D8
7
D10
3
2
1
D12
D14
A15
A17
SOLD OR
UNDER
OFFER
AVAILABLE
13
D16
6
5
4
D18
D20
A21
A23
D22
11
10
9
D24
A25
D26
A27
A29
14
14
D29
FIRE
EXIT
1
2
3
4
5
6
7 Envisage Group
Jaguar Land Rover
Under offer
Invest North East England
Speedy Services
Under offer
Derby - UK Capital for Innovation;
Showcasing companies including
Bombardier, Rolls-Royce and Toyota
If your company supplies any of the sectors
covered by our conference topics, then come
to Liverpool and hear from our panels of experts,
who will reveal the very latest technological
advancements in each sector. They’ll also assess
what new supply chain opportunities will be
created by new materials, new processes and
even new energy sources.
To be able to see two to five years ahead and as
a result plan more accurately is vitally important
to the profitability of every manufacturing company.
For those in the supply chain, it is business critical.
These conferences have been designed to reveal
more about the future and how your company
can improve forward planning as a result of being
given greater insight into the direction that your
industry sector is taking. The conferences should
also reveal new supply chain opportunities
as the focus is on the future technology being
developed today.
8 Made in Britain
9 Under offer
10 Under offer
11 Naylor Industries PLC
12 QuantuMDx Group Ltd
13 The North West Fund
14 Under offer
MADE IN UK CONTACT FOR EXHIBITION SPACE OR CONFERENCE SPONSORSHIP
Marlen Roberts, managing director, Insider Media Limited
Tel: 0161 907 9737
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: #InsiderMadeintheUK
www.madeinthe-uk.co.uk
CONFERENCES – MONDAY 21 JULY
SHALE GAS –
REVOLUTION
WAITING
TO HAPPEN
SHALE GAS The impact of the shale gas boom on the US
economy is beyond dispute, with the International Energy
Agency declaring in November 2013 that this supply of cheap
gas will help give the States an economic edge over Europe and
Asia until 2035. What is the current situation in the UK?
JOHN BLAYMIRES IGAS
Oil and gas exploration and production business IGas
has licences to explore for oil and gas in several UK
locations, including the North West, East Midlands, the
Weald Basin and northern Scotland. Chief operating
officer Blaymires will talk about IGas’s UK plans.
DRIVING
INTO THE
FUTURE
ADVANCED AUTOMOTIVE Transport as we know it is
changing. Fuel resources are not infinite and with a
growing global car-owning class making resources yet
tighter, demand is stepping up for a more intelligent,
sustainable culture of car use. We need more efficient
cars, we need more intelligent cars, we need cars that are
cheaper to assemble and to run – it’s all part of the need
for more intelligent urban transport. So what’s being done
to explore and exploit new innovations?
PETER STYLES KEELE UNIVERSITY
Styles recently authored a report for the Department of
Energy and Climate Change on hydraulic fracturing
(fracking) and is ideally placed to provide a balanced
analysis of the challenges and opportunities.
ALAN FOSTER MCLAREN AUTOMOTIVE
Foster has been at the forefront of the
development of McLaren from being known
purely for Formula 1 to a brand that is perhaps
the most iconic name in the UK’s high-performance automotive industry, and an exemplar of
cutting-edge technologies.
JOHN MILES ARUP
LEE PETTS REMSOL
Petts, founder and managing director of waste and
environmental management services company Remsol, headed to the House of Lords to take part in a
government inquiry into the future of shale gas and
fracking.
ANDREW DOBBIE OFFICE OF
UNCONVENTIONAL GAS AND OIL
Andrew Dobbie has been deputy head of the government’s office of unconventional gas and oil since
June 2013. He leads in that office on issues of public
engagement and maximising the economic benefit
to the UK of shale development.
PETER ROSE INEOS
Peter Rose has over 30 years experience in the
chemical industry at major multinationals including
Dow, Amoco, BP Chemicals and INEOS. He was involved in the recent infrastructure agreements to secure
ethane feedstock for INEOS in Europe from the US.
Miles, chairman of the UK Automotive Council
Working Group on Intelligent Mobility, will speak
on his specialist area, the technology and
economics of future transport systems – will the
driverless car come to the fore?
NORMAN LEECE GASFILL LIMITED
Resource poverty is a looming issue, and gasfill
Limited has developed a compressed natural
gas pump for refuelling cars and vans at home
or at work, a development with potentially huge
bottom-line benefits to business.
NEILL BRIGGS BAC MONO
The BAC Mono, now in production in Liverpool, is
a lightweight, ultra-high performance, road-legal
supercar. Co-founder of Briggs Automotive Company, Briggs is an experienced engineer, having
worked for the likes of Bentley and Ford.
ANDREW MACKENZIE INEOS CHLORVINYLS
Andrew Mackenzie has more than 25 years’ experience
in the chemical industry. He specialises in energy
procurement for one of the UK’s most energy-intensive
sites and has been involved in lobbying in support of
globally competitive energy supplies.
MONDAY 21 JULY 9.00AM-11.00AM
SPONSORED BY
FREE TO ATTEND
CONFERENCES AND EXHIBITION
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Please contact the events team on 0161 907 9754 or email [email protected]
MONDAY 21 JULY 9.00AM-11.00AM
SPONSORED BY
CONFERENCES – MONDAY 21 JULY
RENAISSANCE OF THE UK
NUCLEAR
SUPPLY CHAIN
NUCLEAR With the first of a new wave of nuclear power stations
winning approval in October 2013, the message is clear – nuclear will
form a large part of the UK energy mix as the country looks to forge
a robust energy future where the lights won’t go out. What opportunities exist within the supply chain? What are the hurdles companies
need to overcome to become a part of the UK’s nuclear story? The
session will be addressed by leading experts, each representing a
particular field within the civil nuclear sector.
MIKE TYNAN NUCLEAR AMRC
Tynan, formerly chief executive of Westinghouse UK, joined the
Nuclear Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (AMRC) in
summer 2013 as the government was publishing its nuclear
industrial strategy. He’s ideally placed to give an overview of
what’s happened so far and where the sector’s going.
JAMES LAW STS DEFENCE
Companies can’t just walk into nuclear – it’s a highly specialised
business and getting the correct training and accreditation is no
walk in the park. Law is the business manager for nuclear engineering services at STS Defence, a business that will be fundamental in meeting the requirements of the supply chain going forward.
JULIEN CIAMACA EDF ENERGY
Ciamaca is part of the Hinkley Point C EPR Project for Nuclear
New Build (NNB). His role as manufacturing inspection manager
covers electrical equipment, C&I and the conventional island
and balance of plant areas. Prior to this, he was involved in the
industrial information system of Flamanville 3 EPR in France.
PAUL HINSON EDF ENERGY
Hinson started his career in nuclear before working on automotive
with MG Rover – he returned to the nuclear industry in 2005 with
British Energy, progressing to manage a team of supply chain
specialists. In 2010, when EDF bought British Energy, he moved
into the nuclear new build team at EDF and currently works within
the commercial directorate as commercial and procurement
compliance lead.
STEPHEN PRICE
SHEFFIELD FORGEMASTERS INTERNATIONAL
Price has been with Forgemasters, one of the most iconic names
in UK engineering, since 1995 and is central to the development
of the business into new markets – what has the company learned
as it climbs to the next echelon of the nuclear supply chain?
CHRIS SAVAGE
NUCLEAR INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION
Chris Savage leads the NIA’s work on nuclear new build and
supply chain development. He is responsible for the nuclear
new build Programme Management Board and for the Nuclear
Industry Council, jointly chaired with government ministers.
MONDAY 21 JULY 11.30AM-1.30PM
FOOD FOR THE
FUTURE
FOOD & DRINK Quite literally the stuff of life, food and drink
is rarely out of the headlines, and big questions surround
the quality, provenance, sourcing and sustainability of our
food. This session will look at the changing face of a key
sector investing in research and development and modern,
streamlined processes, intelligent growing and production
and highly scientific monitoring. It promises to enlighten and
inform those throughout the supply chain and their partners
with insights into how UK food manufacturing is changing.
KEITH THORNHILL
SIEMENS
Thornhill heads the food and beverage
business unit at industrial powerhouse
Siemens and will inform on the latest
developments in making food production
and packaging more intelligent.
CALUM MURRAY
TECHNOLOGY STRATEGY BOARD
A lead technologist with co-responsibility
for the Sustainable Agriculture and Food
Innovation Platform, Murray will talk about
the government’s £160m investment in
agricultural technology, which will bring
scientific expertise and innovation to UK
farming and growing.
PHILIP PEARSON APS SALADS
APS is a textbook growth story – the
family-owned Cheshire business has risen
to the heights of the Sunday Times Fast
Track 100, now packing and distributing
55 million punnets of tomatoes a year –
so how does it adapt to changes in
technology and market demand?
SAM WHITEHOUSE
QUANTUMDX
Quality molecular diagnostics is what
QuantuMDx is all about – it has the ability
to quickly diagnose the make-up of food
and drink – and with the provenance of
what we’re eating a hot topic in the wake
of the horse-meat scandal, this key
technology is much in demand.
MONDAY 21 JULY 11.30AM-1.30PM
SPONSORED BY
MADE IN UK CONTACT FOR EXHIBITION SPACE OR CONFERENCE SPONSORSHIP
Marlen Roberts, managing director, Insider Media Limited
Tel: 0161 907 9737
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: #InsiderMadeintheUK
www.madeinthe-uk.co.uk
CONFERENCES – MONDAY 21 JULY
A
NEW
HOPE?
RENEWABLE ENERGY
AND THE UK’S POWER
CRISIS
RENEWABLE ENERGY Why, with government ministers resorting
to phrases like “keeping the lights on”, does the UK still lag
behind Europe on renewable energy? The Carbon Trust expects
renewables to meet only 10 per cent of the UK’s power needs by
2020, perhaps 20 per cent at best – and the Renewable Energy
Association ranks the UK 25th out of 27 EU member states in its
contribution from renewables. Why so slow? What is being done
to improve things? What are the key projects that could make a
big difference? This session will gather views from top companies
across the low-carbon energy sector and ask the question: if not
now, then when?
CLINICAL
EXPERTISE
DIGITAL MEDICAL Cross-pollination of skills and technologies is helping to develop leading technologies in the UK.
Take the digital medical sector, where the technological
advances in fields as diverse as video game development,
metrology and the automotive sector are being adapted to
improve processes and treatments in the sector. This will, in
turn, enable paramedics and doctors to analyse situations
much more quickly and save lives – can the UK exploit this
to become a world leader?
DAVID SHEPHERD ABLE UK
The Able Marine Energy Park on the south bank of
the Humber estuary has been identified by the UK
government as a key strategic location in the National
Renewable Infrastructure Plan, and the site is the UK’s
largest enterprise zone. What’s driving this and how
can the Humber be the key to the UK’s energy future?
Find out here.
CLAIRE GIBSON WAVE HUB
Gibson is managing director of Wave Hub, a grid-connected test site for large scale wave and floating wind
energy devices in Cornwall. She led the project from
its inception in 2003 through to construction and now
has overall responsibility for the safe and efficient
operation of Wave Hub on behalf of the UK government’s
Department for Business, Innovation and Skills.
SIMON WHEELER GOOD ENERGY
Wheeler manages the development team at
independent energy supplier Good Energy and is
responsible for identifying new locations that have the
potential to become renewable energy generation
sites. He previously worked with AECOM (UK) and
spent ten years with Hydro Tasmania (Australia), which
supplies 60 per cent of Australia’s renewable energy.
MOHAMMED SADDIQ GENECO
Saddiq has held a number of senior engineering and
management positions in the water industry over the
past 20 years. He is director of GENeco, the renewable
energy arm of Wessex Water, which has led the way in
energy production from waste water and food waste.
He was awarded the 2012 IoD South West Director of
the Year Award for his work on sustainability.
MONDAY 21 JULY 2.00PM-4.00PM
SPONSORED BY
FREE TO ATTEND
CONFERENCES AND EXHIBITION
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Please contact the events team on 0161 907 9754 or email [email protected]
TIM LUFT
SERIOUS GAMES INSTITUTE
Based at the University of Coventry, the
Serious Games Institute is an international
centre of excellence in serious games
applied research, business engagement
and study. Luft will demonstrate how it has
supported medical development.
JIM NEWTON
MCLAREN APPLIED
TECHNOLOGIES
Iconic motor manufacturer McLaren has
developed technologies now used in
a range of sectors including medical.
Newton’s role is to identify those sectors
and opportunities and here he’ll spell out how
McLaren’s technology is making a difference
in the medical sector.
SAM WHITEHOUSE
QUANTUMDX
Quality molecular diagnostics is what
QuantuMDx is all about. Using a smartphone-like handheld device, it can take the
ability to quickly diagnose disease into
territories where quality care is scarce. This
technology could be a huge weapon in the
humanitarian healthcare challenge.
NICK JONES RENISHAW
Jones heads the group engineering
department responsible for additive manufacturing at Renishaw, the groundbreaking
metrology and precision engineering firm.
How is additive manufacturing –
3D printing – playing a part in the
medical world?
MONDAY 21 JULY 2.00PM-4.00PM
CONFERENCES – TUESDAY 22 JULY
LIVING
IN A MATERIAL WORLD
ADVANCED MATERIALS With the world’s emerging
economies gaining ground in knowledge and facilities all
the time, how can the UK can maintain its competitive edge
in advanced manufacturing? Developing and producing the
materials that will shape not just the manufacturing industry
but the world around us is one area the UK has an
advantage in. This session will feature speakers at the
forefront of materials technology, who will inform as to the
advances being made in their particular fields of expertise.
JAMES BAKER
NATIONAL GRAPHENE INSTITUTE
Graphene is Manchester’s great discovery
of the 21st century, and the National
Graphene Institute has been established to
commercialise this potentially
epoch-defining super-thin, super-strong,
super-conductive material.
TONY KINSELLA
LUCIDEON
Kinsella joined Lucideon, as ceramics
powerhouse Ceram is now known, in 2004
and has turned a struggling business into
an institution that is working with leading
universities on ceramics applications that
will form a large part of the future.
PETER CHIVERS
NATIONAL COMPOSITES CENTRE
Composites are the central element of
key sectors like aerospace. Chivers heads
the National Composites Centre, which
opened in June 2011 to bring together
dynamic companies and leading academics
to develop new technologies in composite
manufacture. Where is this exciting market
heading?
ALAN MCLELLAND NAMTEC
McClelland is chief executive of the
National Metals Technology Centre
(NAMTEC). Formed in 2002, NAMTEC
improves the competitiveness and
sustainability of the metals and related
industries in three key sectors: oil and gas;
aerospace and defence; and power
generation – so what are the big opportunities and challenges in metals?
TUESDAY 22 JULY 9.00AM-11.00AM
MEETING THE GLOBAL
AEROSPACE
CHALLENGE
AEROSPACE Aerospace is one area in which the UK can
genuinely claim to be world class. It has the second largest
aerospace sector in the world, and a supply chain producing
goods rival economies can’t match. That won’t remain the
case forever, though – economies like China, India and Brazil
are pouring investment into aerospace. So how can the
aerospace industry maintain its competitive edge? This
session will feature top speakers from the industry and the
view from government. It presents an ideal opportunity to
come and hear the most up-to-date view of the future of
aerospace in the UK.
PAUL EVERITT ADS GROUP
ADS is the trade organisation for UK
companies in aerospace, defence, security
and space. It is the industry’s link to
government and works closely with the
major prime manufacturers, making it
uniquely placed to advise smaller
businesses and suppliers about what they
need to do to play a part in making the
international transport of tomorrow.
DAVID HOLMES BAE SYSTEMS
Holmes is director of investment,
infrastructure service and manufacturing
function for the Military Air and Information
(MAI) business unit of BAE Systems, which
manages investment in plant machinery
and site infrastructure across the global
BAE estate. He’s in charge of projects such
as the ongoing £800m redevelopment at
Samlesbury, Lancashire – what’s the plan here
and what can smaller businesses do to work
with BAE?
GARETH DAVIES AIRBUS
Airbus is one of the world’s largest aviation
businesses, being a pan-European powerhouse responsible for leading airliners.
Davies, an aerospace professional since
1983 when he joined British Aerospace,
is head of the A350 wing industrialisation
unit at Broughton - the A350 programme
is the most accelerated industrial ramp-up
programme in Airbus history with over 850
aircraft already ordered. The A350‘s wings
are the first composite wings and offer a
hint of a sustainable future for aviation.
TUESDAY 22 JULY 9.00AM-11.00AM
SPONSORED BY
MADE IN UK CONTACT FOR EXHIBITION SPACE OR CONFERENCE SPONSORSHIP
Marlen Roberts, managing director, Insider Media Limited
Tel: 0161 907 9737
Email: [email protected]
Twitter: #InsiderMadeintheUK
www.madeinthe-uk.co.uk
CONFERENCES – TUESDAY 22 JULY
OCEAN OF
FACTORY OF THE
FUTURE
ADVANCED ENGINEERING British engineers are widely held to be
the world’s finest, with ex-pat Brits being key figures in the multinational engineering and manufacturing conglomerates powering
nations to the top of the world’s economic order. Who are the
visionaries shaping the way UK manufacturing works? How big
a part is robotics playing, how do intelligent systems power the
modern factory and what role will 3D printing come to play?
This session will inform and enlighten as to what the factory of
the future will look like.
RAJ ROY CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY
Head of the manufacturing and materials department
at Cranfield University, director of the EPSRC Centre for
Innovative Manufacturing in Through-life Engineering
Services and director of the Operations Excellence Institute.
He is a leading authority on modern manufacturing and
engineering issues and will speak about next-generation
self-monitoring and repairing plant and equipment.
OPPORTUNITY
SUPERPORT AND THE ATLANTIC GATEWAY Since 2008, the
Ocean Gateway vision developed by Peel Group chairman John
Whittaker has already delivered more than £2bn to the North
West economy, but there could be so much more to come – with
the SuperPort development offering for the first time a genuine
alternative to the southern ports, this 56-project masterplan
could fundamentally alter the way UK manufacturers make their
investment and location decisions. With a raft of major logistics
and commercial projects such as Port Salford, Liverpool Waters
and Wirral Waters, as well as Airport City and 3MG outside the
Peel orbit, how might the UK’s commercial landscape change?
NEIL BURNS CROFT FILTERS
DENNIS HENDERSON PEEL PORTS GROUP
Peel stands at the centre of the Atlantic Gateway vision,
with holdings at key waterside sites across the North West.
Henderson will give an up-to-the-minute update on progress
across the empire as things start to happen fast.
Burns is a founder and co-director at Croft Filters and
Croft Additive Manufacturing, which was selected as the
first company to join the Science & Technology Facilities
Council (STFC) CERN Business Incubation Centre. The
centre aims to bridge the gap between science and
industry as UK manufacturing looks to get ahead of the
curve in 3D printing.
MIKE GARRATT MDS TRANSMODAL
KEN YOUNG
MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY CENTRE
Unipart Logistics has pioneered the adaptation of lean
thinking in warehousing and distribution. Molloy, global
industrial director of its aftermarket business, chairs the
Liverpool SuperPort’s advisory board and will speak on the
potential of this major development.
Young is technology director at the Manufacturing Technology Centre, a leading expert on robotics and chairman
of the British Automation and Robotics Association.
He’ll speak about the progress made by robotics in UK
manufacturing, the key sectors for robotics, where the
UK sits in the global market and the role robotics can
play in making the factory of the future.
SIMON KEOGH
SIEMENS INDUSTRIAL AUTOMATION
Siemens is an all-powerful manufacturing powerhouse
that plays a central role in just about every sector of
manufacturing there is, from power generation through
to drive transmission and train-making. Here we’ll hear
about how it provides “the brain of the factory”.
PHIL HANDLEY CATERPILLAR
Handley, a 37-year industry veteran, is the managing
director for Caterpillar’s articulated trucks division in
Peterlee, County Durham, a facility that exports 95 per
cent of its products and has recently undergone a major
investment. How does such a major industrial name
equip itself for the future?
Garratt, a specialist transport economist, specialises in rail
freight and maritime projects, making him the ideal analyst for
a multi-modal transport future – is the plan on the right tracks
and what other possibilities could there be?
BERNARD MOLLOY UNIPART LOGISTICS
SHULAH JONES
PORT ACADEMY LIVERPOOL
Jones, who joined Hugh Baird College in 2013, is the
strategic lead on the development of Port Academy Liverpool,
a one-stop shop for skills in port operations and maritime
logistics set to open in September 2014.
MARK BASNETT LIVERPOOL LEP
Basnett has over 20 years’ experience in driving regeneration
and with the Liverpool City Region LEP is responsible for
delivering growth in the low carbon economy and SuperPort.
In the last nine years he has worked on supporting over
100 investment projects in the city region, helping create and
safeguard over 10,000 jobs.
MATTHEW LAMB POTTER LOGISTICS
Matthew Lamb has been managing director of Potter Logistics
since October 2005. He has held management roles with
major third party logistics companies and spent seven years
with Saint-Gobain. He is a fellow of the Chartered Institute
of Logistics and Transport and a member of the Yorkshire
Regional Council of the CBI.
TUESDAY 22 JULY 11.30AM-1.30PM
TUESDAY 22 JULY 2.00PM-4.00PM
SPONSORED BY
SPONSORED BY
FREE TO ATTEND
MADE IN UK CONTACT
Marlen Roberts, managing director, Insider Media Limited
CONFERENCES AND EXHIBITION
Tel: 0161 907 9738
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Email: [email protected]
Please contact the events team on 0161 907 9754 or email [email protected]
NATIONAL AWARDS DINNER
UK FINALISTS
NATIONAL AWARDS DINNER
The Made in the UK event is just 6 weeks away. To attend the Awards Dinner, contact
Lianne Sunderland on email: [email protected] or call 0161 907 9741.
1ST AWARD
ADVANCED MANUFACTURING INNOVATION /
CREATIVE DESIGN AWARD
Sponsored by
SHORTLISTED
North East – Advanced Industrial Solutions
Wales – Direct Healthcare Services
South West – Helitune
Yorkshire – Harrison Spinks
North West – Sovex
Wales – GOS Tool and Engineering
Services
Midlands – Gardner Denver
Sheffield – Pryor Marking Technology
England – MacDermid Autotype
2ND AWARD
ADVANCED MANUFACTURER /
TECHNOLOGY AWARD
Sponsored by
SHORTLISTED
North East – Route Monkey
South East – Elekta
North West – Glossop Cartons
Wales – MöllerTech
South West – Aero Stanrew
Midlands – Greenbank Group
England – Krohne UK
3RD AWARD
EXPORT AWARD
Sponsored by
SEL
ONLY LING
20 TA FA
BLES ST
LEF
T
4TH AWARD
8TH AWARD
SHORTLISTED
South East – Joe & Seph’s Popcorn
Wales – Welsh Whisky Company
South West – Butcombe Brewery
Yorkshire – Ilkley Brewery
North West – G&J Distillers
Northern Ireland – Kilkeel Seafoods
England – Direct Table Foods
Sponsored by
FOOD AND DRINK AWARD
5TH AWARD
GREEN MANUFACTURER /
SUSTAINABLE MANUFACTURER AWARD
Sponsored by
SHORTLISTED
North East – Elanders
Wales – Morgan Advanced Materials
South West – Wyke Farms
North West – Senator Group
Midlands – Mereway Kitchens
6TH AWARD
MANUFACTURING APPRENTICESHIP /
TRAINING SCHEME AWARD
SHORTLISTED
South East – Xtrac
Wales – FSG Tool & Die
Sheffield – Gripple
Sheffield – Tata Steel
South West – Marshfield Bakery
Yorkshire – Dale Power Solutions
North West – Jaguar Land Rover
Midlands – Nylacast
England – MBDA UK
AEROSPACE AND DEFENCE AWARD
SHORTLISTED
South East – Surrey Satellite Technology
South West – Spirent
England – Marshall Aerospace and
Defence Group
9TH AWARD
MANUFACTURER OF THE YEAR AWARD
Sponsored by
SHORTLISTED
North East – Ebac Group
South East – Scientifica (under £25m
turnover)
South East – Xtrac (above £25m turnover)
Wales – SPTS Technologies
South West – Thatchers Cider
Yorkshire – Evenort (under £20m turnover)
Yorkshire – Camira Fabrics (above £20m
turnover)
North West – ATG Access
Midlands – Automotive Insulations
Northern Ireland – Tyrone Fabrication
Sheffield – President Engineering Group
(under £20m turnover)
Sheffield – Chesterfield Special Cylinders
England – The Cambridge Satchel
Company (SME)
England – Marshall Aerospace and
Defence Group (Large)
7TH AWARD
SHORTLISTED
North East – Tharsus Group
South East – Smith Flow Control
Wales – Chromogenex Technologies
South West – Vi-Spring
Yorkshire – Naylor Industries
North West – Meltech Group
Midlands – Caparo Precision Strip
Northern Ireland – Valpar Industrial
Sheffield – Macalloy
England – Oxford Cryosystems
DRINKS RECEPTION SPONSOR
MEDICAL / LIFE SCIENCES & HEALTHCARE
AWARD
SHORTLISTED
North East – QuantuMDx
Wales – Norgine
Yorkshire – Sheffield Precision Medical
North West – MSoft eSolutions
Northern Ireland – Armstrong Medical
DELEGATE BAG SPONSOR
MADE IN THE UK IS PART OF THE