
What do government 'Silicon Fens' plans mean for Cambridge?
The Environment Agency has lifted its objections to developments around Cambridge, delivering 4,500 homes, plus associated facilities such as schools, as well as office and laboratory space in the city centre at the Beehive CentreThe government will let water companies unlock £7.9bn in investment to build new reservoirs, including a new Fens Reservoir to serve CambridgeFunding has been confirmed for transport projects, including the East West Rail, and an upgrade on the A428 between Milton Keynes and CambridgeThe new Cambridge Cancer Research Hospital will be prioritisedSupport has been confirmed for a new East Coast Mainline station at Tempsford, BedfordshireThe government has backed the University of Cambridge's plans to build a large scale innovation hub in the city centre
Economic potential
Ms Reeves said: "Oxford and Cambridge offer huge economic potential for our nation's growth prospects."Just 66 miles apart, these cities are home to two of the best universities in the world, two of the most intensive innovation clusters in the world and the area is a hub for globally renowned science and technology firms in life sciences, manufacturing, and AI."To grow, these world-class companies need world-class talent who should be able to get to work quickly and find somewhere to live in the local area. But to get from Oxford to Cambridge by train takes two and a half hours."Oxford and Cambridge are two of the least affordable cities in the UK. In other words, the demand is there but there are far too many supply side constraints on economic growth in the region."
To help meet the government's aims, Science Minister Lord Patrick Vallance has been appointed as the Oxford-Cambridge Growth Corridor Champion.He said: "The UK has all the ingredients to replicate the success of Silicon Valley or the Boston Cluster, but for too long has been constrained by short termism and a lack of direction."I look forward to working with local leaders to fulfil the Oxford-Cambridge corridor's potential by building on its existing strengths in academia, life sciences, semiconductors, AI and green technology amongst others."
Political analysis
The government keeps saying its main mission is to grow the economy. Now the chancellor has made it very clear that she wants this region to be at the forefront of that mission.Never before have there been so many local announcements in one speech: airport expansion, road improvements, new homes, a station even a reservoir. For years the business community has been telling governments the region has significant potential, if only it was given the support that it needed to grow. Rachel Reeves has listened and now expects the region to deliver.A lot of these ideas are not new. Public opposition and a lack of confidence by investors meant they have not became reality. The chancellor wants it to be different this time by driving the changes through the planning system with limited time for consultation.There will be opposition to some of this, there will be legal battles - it may not all succeed and it will certainly take time. But if it does happen, the look of this region and the way people view this region will change considerably.
Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Church leaders return with ‘broken hearts' after rare Gaza visit
Church leaders in Jerusalem say they have returned from a trip to Gaza with "broken hearts", describing starving people and children not "batting an eyelid" at the sound of bombing."We have seen men holding out in the sun for hours in the hope of simple meal," the Latin Patriarch, Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, told journalists."This is humiliation that is hard to bear when you see it with you own eyes. It is morally unacceptable and unjustifiable."The Greek Orthodox Patriarch, Theophilos III, said his Church would "stand in solidarity" with "the whole people of Gaza". The two men made a rare visit to the war-torn strip after Israeli tank fire hit the Catholic Holy Family Church in Gaza City last week, killing two women and a President Donald Trump is said to have made an angry call to Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu about the deadly strike, which came days after an alleged attack by extremist Israeli settlers next to the ruins of an ancient church in the Christian village of Taybeh in the occupied West office expressed deep regret for what was described as "a stray ammunition" hitting the Gaza local Christians have questioned whether the place of worship was deliberately targeted. About 400 people have been sheltering in the compound, which is in part of Gaza City now under Israeli evacuation orders. At the news conference, Pizzaballa noted that Christians were suffering in the same ways as other Palestinians."Three people died in our community, but thousands already died in Gaza," he added that recent settler violence in Taybeh, was part of "broader phenomenon" in the West Bank which was "becoming a no-law land".Although Italy's foreign ministry announced that the patriarchs had entered Gaza with 500 tonnes of aid, Pizzaballa said "not a gram" had yet been able to enter due to logistical issues. He described the disappointment of those who came to the church hoping for some of the most severe food shortages in 21 months of war, Pizzaballa and Theophilos III said they met people "totally starved" and gave an account of the widespread destruction."We walked through the dust of ruins, past collapsed buildings and tents everywhere: in courtyards, alleyways, on the streets and on the beach," Pizzaballa said at the end of his four-day visit. "Tents that have become homes for those who have lost everything." Last week, the two Church leaders led a delegation of foreign diplomats to Taybeh, north of Ramallah, where residents and local priests described several attacks by most serious was the fire stared next to the ruins of the Byzantine Church of St Israeli police statement said on Tuesday that a special investigative unit had found that "contrary to misleading reports, no damage was caused" to the church. It said the fire was limited to an adjacent open area and that arson was not yet one witness told the BBC that he saw settlers starting the blaze and others accused Israeli security forces of failing to respond to their say extremists have seized their plots on the edge of Taybeh and regularly harass them, bringing cattle to eat their olive trees."What's going on is really ridiculous and it's driving people out as Israelis put their hands on our land," a former mayor and co-founder of the Taybeh brewery, Daoud Khoury, told the said he worried that extremist settlers and an economic downturn since the start of the Gaza war would force more Christians to emigrate. In an unusual move, the US ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, also visited Taybeh on a statement, he then denounced the attack by the church as "an act of terror" and demanded "harsh consequences" for those who is also an evangelical pastor known for his past strong statements supporting Jewish settlements, which are seen as illegal under international law, wrote on X. "Desecrating a church, mosque or synagogue is a crime against humanity and God."In response to the Israeli police statement, he wrote that he had not attributed the fire to any group, that "regardless, it was crime and deserves consequences". At the Jerusalem press conference, Theophilos III said that the tiny Christian community must be supported to remain in Gaza, close to their holy places "full of history".During his trip, Pizzaballa told an Italian newspaper that a Catholic presence would stay in the territory "whatever happens".The two leaders reiterated calls by Pope Leo and a growing number of international leaders for a Gaza ceasefire and the release of remaining hostages held by Hamas."We are not against Israel," said Pizzaballa, who is known as a supporter of interfaith dialogue. "But we need to say with frankness and clarity, that this policy of the Israeli government in Gaza is unacceptable and morally we cannot justify it."


BreakingNews.ie
2 hours ago
- BreakingNews.ie
More than 100 aid and rights groups call for action as hunger spreads in Gaza
More than 100 largely aid and rights groups on Wednesday called for governments to take action as hunger spreads in Gaza, including by demanding an immediate and permanent ceasefire and the lifting of all restrictions on the flow of humanitarian aid. In a statement signed by 111 organisations, including Mercy Corps, the Norwegian Refugee Council and Refugees International, the groups warned that mass starvation was spreading across the enclave even as tons of food, clean water, medical supplies and other items sit untouched just outside Gaza as humanitarian organisations are blocked from accessing or delivering them. Advertisement "As the Israeli government's siege starves the people of Gaza, aid workers are now joining the same food lines, risking being shot just to feed their families. With supplies now totally depleted, humanitarian organisations are witnessing their own colleagues and partners waste away before their eyes," the organisations said. "The Government of Israel's restrictions, delays, and fragmentation under its total siege have created chaos, starvation, and death." The organisations called for governments to demand that all bureaucratic and administrative restrictions be lifted, all land crossings be opened, access to everyone across Gaza to be ensured and for the rejection of military-controlled distribution and a restoration of a "principled, UN-led humanitarian response." "States must pursue concrete measures to end the siege, such as halting the transfer of weapons and ammunition." Advertisement Israel, which controls all supplies entering Gaza, denies it is responsible for shortages of food. More than 800 people have been killed in recent weeks trying to reach food, mostly in mass shootings by Israeli soldiers posted near Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distribution centres. The foundation, backed by the United States, has been fiercely criticised by humanitarian organisations, including the United Nations, for an alleged lack of neutrality. Israeli forces have killed nearly 60,000 Palestinians in airstrikes, shelling and shooting since launching their assault on Gaza in response to attacks on Israel by the Hamas group that killed 1,200 people and captured 251 hostages in October 2023. For the first time since the war began, Palestinian officials say dozens are now also dying of hunger. Gaza has seen its food stocks run out since Israel cut off all supplies to the territory in March and then lifted that blockade in May with new measures it says are needed to prevent aid from being diverted to militant groups. The Norwegian Refugee Council told Reuters on Tuesday its aid stocks were completely depleted in Gaza, with some of its staff now starving, and the organisation accused Israel of paralysing its work.


BBC News
5 hours ago
- BBC News
Community groups call for locally-owned solar farms in Kent
Community groups in the South East are calling on ministers to "move faster" to help residents own and use locally-produced solar panels are a key part of the government's energy strategy, but are controversial, with residents campaigning against large scale farms that they fear will affect the local like Kent Community Energy say sites owned by the local community are more likely to gain support, because they allow profits from electricity sold to be re-invested in nearby charities and government said: "Community projects are at the heart of our 2030 clean power mission." Just outside Sittingbourne in Kent, two fields are covered in gleaming solar produces five megawatts (MW) of electricity, and together they can produce enough energy to power around 7,000 unlike many privately-owned solar farms, the profits made from selling the energy produced here are put back into the local community. 'What's not to like?' Michael Bax, managing director of Kent Community Energy, which owns one of the two sites, says the money they make is re-invested into the business and given to local charities."Kent Community Energy is owned by ordinary people in Kent and elsewhere... every penny that we make is put back into the Kent community," he believes this model of producing energy is the future."You only have to look at this site, it's quiet, it's friendly to nature. We're a haven to birds and biodiversity," he added."Yesterday we generated 37,000 kilowatt hours (kWh), that's enough to power about 3,500 houses without a single drop of carbon being produced."So from our point of view, what's not to like?" However, there are groups of residents across the region who are not so keen on particular, large scale solar Cleve Hill project, which covers more than 950 acres of farmland near Faversham, equivalent in size to four Bluewater shopping centres, has attracted multiple protests from local residents, worried about the impact on the landscape and plans for an even larger site at Romney Marsh have drawn similar concerns. The local Reform Kent county councillor, David Wimble, oversees environment for the said: "I've got nothing against solar farms, per se, but what I do have a problem with is them being on grade A agricultural land."I think food security is just as important, if not more important, than solar."He added that he intended to fight projects like these."I'm just about to set up something called the Kent Solar Forum to get all the [protest groups] together and have one voice. We just think it's too much." The government has made solar power a key part of its energy strategy to reach net zero carbon have vowed to generate enough clean power to meet Britain's total annual electricity demand by 2030 - including up to 47 gigawatts of they know they could have a fight on their asked about local opposition to projects earlier this year, Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said: "If we don't [build solar] we are going to be exposed as a country to those fossil fuels which have caused such damage to so many people".Those behind community-owned power believe government need to do more to unlock community schemes, which they say will help bring more residents on Pendered is the chief executive of Community Energy Pathways, which supports community energy groups to get themselves said local people could "take ownership" of these projects, "harness community benefits... and mould them into what they want to see locally".But he wants ministers to go further, by making it easier for residents to use the energy produced from local projects to power their own homes and bring down bills."That's something that needs to be unlocked by government. It enables people to keep the power in the local community and use that power locally, it just makes complete sense," he said.A spokesperson for the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero said: "Community projects are at the heart of our 2030 clean power mission, and through Great British Energy, we're putting power back into the hands of the people by giving communities a stake in their energy supply and ensuring they can reap the benefits."There is nothing to prevent suppliers from selling their power via local electricity tariffs, and they do not have to sell it back to the grid."However, the government has said it recognises that there is scope to better enable local energy markets, and it is exploring this further.