Category: Press Releases

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government response to the Business and Trade Committee’s submission to the National Security and Investment Act Call for Evidence 2023 [April 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government response to the Business and Trade Committee’s submission to the National Security and Investment Act Call for Evidence 2023 [April 2024]

    The press release issued by the Cabinet Office on 18 April 2024.

    This is the Government’s response to the Business and Trade Committee’s submission to the NSI Call for Evidence.

    1. The Business and Trade Committee made a submission to the NSI Call for Evidence on 6th February 2024*. The following text is the Government’s response to the Committee’s submission, taking the Committee’s recommendations in order. The bold headings come from the Committee’s submission whilst the plain text is the Government’s response.

    (*) Business and Trade Subcommittee response to the Call for Evidence on the National Security and Investment Act 2021

    The Changing Context

    A. There has been a significant change in inbound investment trends. The nature of the threat to the UK has also changed. Our allies’ strategy has also evolved.  It is vital that the UK does not become a ‘back door’ through which our adversaries acquire capabilities that imperil NATO allies’ collective security.

    2. The Committee has identified a number of significant global changes, in particular changes in inbound investment trends, the nature of threats to the UK, and our allies’ strategies. These shifts form important parts of the rationale for the introduction of the NSI Act and the way it has been operated, and the backdrop for the strategy articulated by the Government in the Integrated Review 2021 and the Integrated Review Refresh 2023.

    3. Given these changing and uncertain times, the Government has directed substantial resource to develop national security legislation (including the NSI Act) and underpinning systems that are flexible enough to respond to the ever-changing threats, whilst being transparent and predictable enough to ensure the UK remains an attractive place to invest.

    4. Two years after the NSI system commenced, we can see that it is working well, and the Call for Evidence represents an excellent opportunity to keep the system under review in a predictable and measured way.

    5. The Government continues to work very closely with our allies to ensure the UK’s investment screening system draws on global best practice. Through this continuing engagement, our allies are also now learning from the UK’s experiences as they amend their own approaches. In February 2023 the US Government upheld the UK’s status as an ‘Excepted Foreign State’ under the US investment screening system, describing the NSI system as ‘robust’ and demonstrating their confidence in the operation of the NSI Act even at that early stage.

    6. The Government is committed to ensuring that the NSI system remains effective and flexible, adapting to the changing nature of our economy, in line with our allies’ approaches. The recent NSI Call for Evidence and its outcomes demonstrate  that commitment.

    B. The lack of a clear definition of ‘national security’ undermines the NSI system: an explicit definition of ‘national security,’ which is well-communicated and understood by business in particular, would help to ensure that we create a ‘small garden and high fence.’

    7. National security risks are multifaceted and constantly evolving, as the Committee acknowledges in its submission. In line with other legislation and longstanding governmental practice, the Government therefore does not define national security, since providing a definition could itself result in risks being missed and harm the Government’s ability to safeguard national security. This was subject to extensive debate at the time the NSI Bill was going through Parliament, and the Government’s position has not changed.

    8. The Government already follows a “small garden, high fence” approach: safeguarding the UK against the small number of deals that could be harmful to our security whilst leaving the vast majority of transactions unaffected. The Act’s mandatory notification requirements ensure that the Government does not need to be notified of the large majority of deals that pose no national security risk while making sure it is notified of those deals that do warrant consideration under the Act. However, this does not prevent the Government from scrutinising or intervening in acquisitions in the rest of the economy where it identifies national security risk.

    9. The Government is committed to ensuring that the legislation operates as transparently as possible, ensuring that businesses understand how the Act applies to them, without compromising national security or constraining its ability to conduct proper scrutiny. This is why the Government published guidance on the exercise of the call-in power (the “Section 3 Statement”) and the mandatory sector definitions, which the Government will be reviewing over the coming months to reflect the past two years of experience. Doing so will ensure the legislation continues to operate in a transparent and predictable manner.

    C. Awareness amongst industry of the NSI Act’s coverage appears to be low.

    10. Contrary to the Committee’s assertion, responses to the Call for Evidence indicated high awareness of the NSI Act. 80% of the 110 responses the Government received agreed or strongly agreed they have a good understanding of the risks the Government is seeking to address. This is the result of extensive and ongoing engagement with sector-specific trade organisations, as well as with individual businesses and legal firms over the last three years since Royal Assent. The Government is reassured by the level of understanding and believe the number of notifications the Government receives reflects strong awareness of and compliance with the NSI Act.

    11. Nevertheless, the Government remains committed to improving understanding of the legislation. This was the driver for the questions in the Call for Evidence which asked about particular topics where businesses would welcome more information or clarity. The Government will respond to this by engaging with stakeholders and through our continuous updates to guidance, in order to aid comprehension and compliance, following our best practice established through the development and implementation of the Act.

    The Scope of the Act

    D. We welcome the Government’s proposals to:

    a) create a standalone ‘semiconductors’ sector that would be covered under the Act to make it clearer which types of transactions involving semiconductors are subject to mandatory notification;

    b) create a standalone ‘critical minerals’ sector under the Act.

    We call on the Government to take this opportunity to secure wider critical minerals supply chains … [and] ensure that the new ‘critical minerals’ category under the NSI Act remains aligned with the UK Critical Minerals Strategy.

    12. The Government is grateful for the Committee’s endorsement of these proposals. The proposals are the result of careful engagement with businesses over the past two years, which in turn followed extensive consultation during the original development of the Notifiable Acquisition Regulations.

    13. As the Committee may be aware, the Government has a statutory obligation to review the Notifiable Acquisition Regulations within a three year period of them coming into force. The Call for Evidence effectively launched this review and, to refine the proposals further, the Government will publish a consultation on updating the mandatory area definitions  in the summer. This means that the Government will not comment on the specific proposals now, but would like to provide reassurance that the ISU will continue to work closely with the relevant experts inside and outside of Government, and intends to harmonise the new ‘Critical Minerals’ area with the Critical Minerals Intelligence Centre’s (CMIC) latest criticality assessment. CMIC’s first criticality assessment informed the list found in the Critical Minerals Strategy.

    14. As with the current regulations, any changes will be drafted carefully to ensure they capture current and future risks: circumstances can change quickly and the regulations must be adaptable to that reality.

    E. We call on the Government to use this review to bring the UK’s investment screening regime under the NSI Act into stronger alignment with those of allies, and in particular with President Biden’s Executive Order 14083 (September 2022). This would involve:

    – creating a new standalone sector to capture transactions relating to media freedoms and the integrity of our democracy;

    – measures to protect access to UK persons’ sensitive data;

    – measures to protect the UK’s ‘cybersecurity’, starting from the definition provided in EO 14083;

    – measures to protect the supply chains and critical imports for strategically important infrastructure and technologies, including those that are essential to the current and future collective security of NATO Allies;

    – measures to protect industry, intellectual property and sensitive data relating to the UK biosecurity industry, including genomics (which is not specifically mentioned under the current secondary legislation), whether through the creation of a standalone sector or inclusion in another sector.

    15. The NSI system is in close alignment with our allies’ approaches to investment screening, including the USA, with whom the Government continues to engage and collaborate with closely.

    16. As a relatively new system, the NSI Act has been able to adopt or adapt the best parts of older systems from around the world, in a way that best suits the UK. Therefore, it should not be a surprise that the areas of focus described in the Executive Order are already able to be considered under the NSI Act. As the UK does not define “national security”, the Government considers a variety of ways in which risks may arise. This includes, for instance, the effect of an acquisition on the UK’s cyber security, or impacts on the UK’s supply chain resilience and critical imports where these concern the UK’s national security.

    17. The US Executive Order also emphasises data security as an area of focus for CFIUS. The powers in the NSI Act apply to assets as well as entities, which is relatively unique, as many systems around the globe only apply their powers to entities. That power to act in asset acquisitions includes the ability to act if the acquisition will grant a person access to sensitive data which could be used to harm the UK’s national security. The UK also benefits from the wider data protections present in the Data Protection Act (2018) which apply to all entities processing personal data.

    18. On the Committee’s suggestions for the creation or amendment of sectors requiring mandatory notification, as noted above, the Government will publish a consultation on updating the mandatory areas in the summer so will not comment on the Committee’s specific proposals now.

    F. We further request information on the ISU’s approach to identifying the critical sectors subject to mandatory notifications under the Act. The Committee needs to understand how the ISU undertakes technology forecasting, how this forecasting is assessed against the Government’s understanding of future geopolitical trends, and how expertise within and outside the Government is brought to bear in that process.

    19. The Government arrived at the mandatory area definitions through extensive consultation with Government and external experts. It consulted on the mandatory area definitions in November 2020 and responses to this consultation were used to refine the definitions so they provide enough clarity to allow parties to self-assess whether they need to notify. The definitions are carefully drafted to capture technologies that will be relevant in the future as well as now. Part of the purpose of the Call for Evidence was to inform a review of the Regulations that define the mandatory areas. As part of this process the Government continues to engage with internal and external experts to keep abreast of emerging technology and geopolitical trends to ensure the mandatory areas continue to capture the right technologies and sectors. This will include drawing on a range of assessment and horizon scanning products, including Joint Intelligence Committee assessments and Government Office for Science analysis.

    G. We ask the Government to commit to reviewing the critical sectors subject to mandatory notifications on an annual basis.

    20. The Government recognises the importance of staying up to date with emerging technology and threats. However it also believes predictability and consistency are important for continued compliance with NSI Act, especially so that acquirers understand whether or not they must submit a notification. This is underpinned by having stable regulations that are not under near-constant review, and a set of mandatory area definitions that are broad enough to capture emerging technologies that might be relevant in the future. The Government believes that an annual review would be unnecessary and introduce uncertainty and potential instability into the NSI system, so the Government has no plans to update the Regulations annually.

    H. The Government should clarify whether it will retrospectively call in for review acquisitions completed since 12 November 2020, if it updates the Notifiable Acquisitions Regulations in future.

    21. The NSI Act grants powers for the Secretary of State to call in acquisitions for review from across the economy, even from outside the sectors defined in the Notifiable Acquisition Regulations, so long as they meet the tests set out in the NSI Act. Changes to the Notifiable Acquisition Regulations do not affect the call in power.

    22. If changes to the Notifiable Acquisition Regulations were to apply retrospectively, then each time the Government updated the regulations it would render all past acquisitions newly in scope of the change immediately void under the NSI Act  if they had not been notified. The Government believes this would introduce significant uncertainty and instability into the NSI system. It is also unnecessary, because the Secretary of State already has the ability to call in acquisitions retrospectively on a case-by-case basis.

    Implementation of the Act

    I. The Government should use its response to this Call for Evidence to clarify the process for dealing with differences of opinion between the two Ministers.

    23. To clarify the process for dealing with any differences of opinion between Ministers who hold responsibility for particular areas of the legislation’s operation and the Deputy Prime Minister in his capacity as Secretary of State in the Cabinet Office: the main point to note is that, under the NSI Act, the Secretary of State is the sole decision-maker and their decision is final.

    24. The contributions of Secretaries of State and other Ministers who have sectoral or other responsibilities are an extremely important part of giving the decision maker the best possible advice. Whilst the Secretary of State may take other Ministers’ views into account, where they are based on relevant considerations according to the usual principles of quasi-judicial decision-making, these are advisory only, and the final decision is for the Secretary of State, based on the full evidence presented.

    25. The Secretary of State may also delegate decision-making from time to time, for example to avoid an actual or perceived conflict of interest. In such circumstances, there would remain a single decision maker.

    J. The Government should take all possible steps to counter potential ‘acquisition strategies’ by other countries even as it waits for stronger patterns to emerge within the NSI regime data. This includes routinely:

    a. assessing the potential motive of the acquirer or its ultimate beneficial owner as part of formal case reviews;

    b. drawing on Foreign Office and intelligence agencies’ insight into relevant countries’ declared and revealed economic and national security policies;

    c. sharing insight and information with allies on patterns from within the data of mature investment screening regimes, such as CFIUS, and on relevant third countries’ policy goals;

    d. learning from the experiences of more mature regimes in identifying weaker ‘signals’ of a deliberate strategy of acquisition from within the available data.

    26. All of the suggestions made by the Committee in this section are already an integral part of operating the UK’s investment screening system successfully. When assessing the national security risk arising from an acquisition, the ISU takes a holistic view of all aspects of the acquisition. This is in line with the approach set out in the Section 3 Statement, which describes the three primary risk factors the Government expects to consider, namely the risks arising from the target, the acquirer and the control being acquired.

    K. The Government must ensure that the Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies fulfil their responsibilities in introducing and maintaining public registers of beneficial ownership.

    27. The UK Government has made substantial progress in its work with the Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies to improve transparency of beneficial ownership. The UK Government is providing extensive technical and financial assistance to the Overseas Territories to expedite implementation.

    28. Gibraltar introduced a register that went live in 2023. This year, more Overseas Territories expect to implement fully publicly accessible registers. The Crown Dependencies and other permanently inhabited Overseas Territories either reaffirmed their previous commitments or agreed to implement a publicly accessible register with a legitimate interest access filter. These reforms would be a significant boost to beneficial ownership transparency. The UK Government is clear that legitimate interest includes media and civil society, and that it is an interim step to fully publicly accessible registers.

    29. Detailed breakdowns of commitments and timelines for implementation for each Overseas Territory and Crown Dependency were provided in Written Ministerial Statements laid in December 2023 by the Minister for the Americas, the Caribbean and Overseas Territories (HCWS150) and the Minister of State for Security (HCWS151).

    L. We call on the Government to ensure that the NSI regime benefits from joined-up implementation with other recent legislation. This includes:

    – cross-referencing cases under review by the ISU with individuals registered with the Foreign Influence Registration Scheme (FIRS), once established under the National Security Act 2023;

    – putting provisions in place to allow for the sharing of vital intelligence with allies under FIRS;

    – cross-referencing cases under review by the ISU with data held by Companies House. As such, we call on the Government to implement as quickly as possible the proposed reforms to Companies House under the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023.

    30. The Government is working across many different areas to reinforce our economic security protections, as set out in the Integrated Review Refresh. All of our security protective tools must work together seamlessly. The establishment of the ISU as a ‘hub and spoke’ model underpins that seamless working: the ISU has broad reach into and across government departments and agencies. This means that the ISU’s work is always informed by the best available information. The ISU, in turn, brings its operational experience to benefit the establishment and operation of other  parts of the economic security system. Within that, the ISU of course shares data, within the legal frameworks governing information sharing and data protection.

    31. The ISU consults appropriate Government experts to ensure that all relevant information is taken into account during the NSI review process. Reviewing Companies House data is already a key part of the due diligence the ISU undertakes during the initial review period. The ISU will continue to employ all relevant government data, potentially including new sources of data like the Foreign Influence Registration Scheme, where relevant to our assessment of acquisitions under the NSI Act, and in accordance with relevant data protection legislation.

    M. The Committee requests the following information, in confidence if necessary:

    – how the ISU monitors, verifies and reports to Ministers on compliance with, and the effectiveness of, remedies imposed on acquisitions;

    – how many ISU officials are currently devoted to this task and how resourcing might change in future.

    32. Ensuring parties comply with the terms of final orders is vital to the functioning of the system. In most final orders, parties are required to submit statements of compliance to the ISU. This is often on an annual basis but may be more frequent, based on a number of factors. Methods of monitoring vary on a case-by-case basis, focusing on the specific mitigations and risks of a transaction, and what is therefore necessary and proportionate. Verification of information provided to the ISU in compliance with a final order is undertaken in collaboration with the holders of relevant expertise across Government. Where the ISU has concerns, it uses the information gathering powers under the Act, for example issuing an information notice, attendance notice, or drawing on requirements contained in the final order for parties to provide information requested by the ISU.

    33. The Secretary of State will consider enforcement action when it is necessary to ensure compliance with the Act and the terms of orders and notices, to maintain national security, and to deter non-compliance. Obstructive conduct, for example unexplained complications or delays in providing evidence of compliance with interim or final orders, is one example of non-compliance that could result in enforcement action. When considering the level of monetary penalties the Government will consider the seriousness of the offence, which may include any evidence of intentional avoidance or circumvention of ISU scrutiny.

    34. In the event of suspected non-compliance with provisions under the Act, the ISU will provide advice to the Secretary of State on enforcement action. This can include criminal prosecution.

    35. The ISU is appropriately resourced to ensure compliance with the NSI Act and will continue to engage privately with the Committee on such matters.

    N. The Government should review all acquisitions that were issued a final notification within two years of the decision being taken. This is important to ensure both that sensitive technologies have in fact been protected sufficiently and that companies do not find means to evade ISU scrutiny. The Government should also set out how it has incorporated systematic learning into its day-to-day operations.

    36. The ISU constantly reviews its performance and learns lessons from its actions, through formal and informal processes during the assessment of transactions and after a case has concluded. This includes considering where the government can provide further public guidance based on the lessons identified, helping parties interact with the system most effectively.

    37. The NSI Act balances the necessary protection of national security with transparency and certainty to business and investors. The binding nature of final notifications is an important part of this, as it reflects the fact that the Government has undertaken its screening process and concluded that no further action is required, enabling the acquisition to proceed with confidence.

    38. Protections in the Act against future risks to national security include the fact that any onward sale may constitute a separate trigger event. Additionally, there are penalties against the provision of false and misleading information, and powers which enable the Secretary of State to revisit the acquisition if that situation arises.

    Communications with stakeholders

    O. The Government should provide a clearer picture of evolving national security threats through an annual National Security Assessment, similar to the Annual Threat Assessment published by the US Government. We also need a clearer list of factors that decision-takers use to make judgements.

    39. The Integrated Review Refresh shows where the Government sees key geopolitical risks in a broad sense, providing a clear picture of the Government’s policy priorities in light of the rapidly-changing global context.

    40. The Government sets out its assessment of evolving national security threats through the National Risk Register (NRR), which contains the most serious risks that would have a significant impact on the UK’s safety, security, or critical systems at a national level – from terrorism, cyber attacks and state threats, to pandemics, wildfires and industrial action. The most recent register was published in August 2023, and is the most transparent version ever.

    41. Additionally, the Government is establishing a new process for identifying and assessing more continuous and enduring challenges which over time may erode our economy, society, way of life and/or national security – ‘chronic risks’. Following the 2023 National Risk Register, where the Government published more risk information from the classified National Security Risk Assessment than ever before, the Government is now planning to share more detail on this chronic risks analysis later this year.

    42. With specific regard to investment security, the Government has made a statement under section 3 of the NSI Act (referred to as the “Section 3 Statement”) that sets out the factors the Secretary of State expects to take into account when deciding whether to exercise the call in power. This statement has been in place since 2021 and, in light of more than two years of operation of the NSI Act, the Government has announced in its response to the Call for Evidence that it will publish an updated statement in May 2024.

    P. The Government should establish an online tracking portal for all notifications submitted to the ISU.

    43. The ISU is always working to improve its systems, including its digital systems. As the Annual Report showed, 93% of notifications are cleared to proceed within 30 working days, which means the vast majority of notifications can expect a swift screening process that would not materially benefit from a tracking system. The Government always contacts notifiers to inform them whether their notification has been accepted, and if the government wishes to call in the acquisition. For acquisitions undergoing more detailed screening after having been called in, the ISU maintains contact with acquisition parties throughout the assessment period, including routinely offering calls to parties.

    Q. The Government should publish which departments and agencies feed into the decision-making process.

    44. The ISU works across Government to assess acquisitions. This is fundamental to the continued successful operation of the NSI Act, as such a ‘hub and spoke’ model means that deep expertise that the ISU holds with regard to investment screening under the NSI Act can be complemented by deep sectoral, technological and other expertise held across Government. The ISU has the ability to work with any Government department or agency if it is necessary to the successful execution of the powers in the NSI Act. The departments and agencies that contribute to the ISU’s assessment of specific acquisitions includes, but is not limited to: HM Treasury; Foreign, Commonwealth, and Development Office; Home Office; Department for Business and Trade; Department for Digital, Culture, Media, and Sport; Department for Energy Security and Net Zero; Department for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs; Department for Health and Social Care; Department for Levelling Up, Housing, and Communities; Department for Science, Innovation, and Technology; Department for Transport; Ministry of Defence; National Cyber Security Centre; National Protective Security Authority; Office for Life Sciences; UK Government Investments; UK Space Agency. Other Departments and Agencies are involved as and when they are required depending on the specifics of the case.

    R. The Government must undertake tailored engagement with groups that play an important role in the UK economy. In particular, we recommend that the Government offer more detailed, targeted guidance to—and engage earlier with—university joint ventures, start-ups and spin outs.

    45. Ministers and the ISU engage frequently with a wide range of organisations across the UK economy. Specifically, in the first year of operation the ISU and Ministers held over 50 ministerial and official events, reaching up to 1000 stakeholders, including lawyers, investors, businesses, academics, and other governments, to explain how the Act works and gather feedback. In 2023, the Government held around 30 more events at official and ministerial level, with more planned over the course of this year. Additionally, the NSI Expert Panel brings together a cross section of stakeholders who have a detailed knowledge of the NSI system and its effects on important sectors, providing important feedback and insight throughout the year.

    46. Regarding engagement with universities, the Government has published specific guidance for universities and other higher education institutions and has announced in response to the Call for Evidence that it will update this guidance in May. The Government has a dedicated team, the Research Collaboration Advice Team (“RCAT”) which assists researchers and higher education institutions in keeping their work safe whilst keeping the UK research sector open and secure. RCAT provides researchers with specific points of contact as well as giving more general advice about ensuring higher education activity is secure. Ministers and officials continue to meet with stakeholders from the higher education sector.

    S. The Government should pursue increased engagement with and enhanced support to venture capital and private equity firms. The Government should tell the Committee how the ISU is monitoring the impact of the Act specifically on the business confidence of the venture capital and private equity industries.

    47. It is vital that all areas of the economy understand the NSI Act and can engage with the ISU, and that is why the Government undertakes such a large amount of proactive engagement with many types of business. Venture capital and private equity firms are a key group of stakeholders so, in addition to our general outreach and events, the Government has also undertaken targeted engagement with the sector. In April 2023 the Minister for the Investment Security Unit chaired a roundtable of private equity firms, and associated firms have attended other events involving Ministers and officials since before the NSI Act commenced.

    48. The Government remains committed to gaining the best understanding of the effect of the NSI legislation. As well as regularly seeking feedback – for example through the recent Call for Evidence – the Government will also be conducting a Post-Implementation Review of the legislation. Through this review, due to be published five years after implementation, the Government will investigate the Act’s effect on economic activity, including business confidence, across areas of the economy subject to the Notifiable Acquisitions Regulations.

    Enhancing security and transparency

    T. Section 54 is a fundamental roadblock to scrutiny that affects Parliament in its entirety, including all Committees of MPs and Peers. We therefore call on the Government to explore ways to enable this Committee to fulfil its role in scrutinising the NSI regime through amendment to Section 54 of the National Security and Investment Act 2021. This amendment should be brought forward in the current Parliament.

    49. The Government is committed to ensuring that the Committee can access as much of the information it needs to exercise its scrutiny role as possible, whilst recognising the highly commercially sensitive nature and national security significance of the ISU’s work. That is why the Government agreed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Committee in March 2023 governing scrutiny of the ISU, and the arrangements for the sharing of, access to, and handling of, sensitive information. This includes the provision of: a confidential annex to the Annual Report; written notice of the making, variation and revocation of final orders; oral and written evidence; and, where requested by the Committee, explanatory memoranda on specific cases.

    50. However, as set out in the Committee’s Eighth Report of Session 2022-23, the Government and the Committee have agreed that the Committee’s role in scrutinising individual cases should “be exceptional rather than routine”. This reflects the Government’s consistent position that it will ordinarily seek to provide information at an aggregate level rather than on individual cases. In exceptional cases where the limited sharing of information on individual acquisitions is appropriate, the provisions in the Memorandum of Understanding set out the arrangements for this.

    51. The information sharing gateway provided by section 54 of the NSI Act provides a legal framework which governs how information “received under the Act” can be shared, with whom and for what purposes. These safeguards are vital in maintaining the confidence of businesses who provide the ISU with significant amounts of highly sensitive commercial information. The Government recognises the limitations these safeguards place on the information that can be shared with the Committee on specific cases. However, the Government does not consider section 54 to be a “fundamental roadblock” to the Committee’s work in scrutinising the operation of the NSI system, given the Committee’s role in scrutinising individual cases only on an exceptional basis. Amendment to section 54 would necessarily involve primary legislation, which the Government is not currently considering.

    U. The Government should publish key statistics on the NSI system halfway through each reporting year for the next five years, in addition to the Annual Report, to provide external stakeholders with more frequent information on how it is working in practice. We call on the Government to match CFIUS reporting.

    52. Transparency is a vital part of the NSI Act, providing confidence to businesses, investors and wider stakeholders. For this reason there are significant transparency measures built into the legislation. In common with many other investment screening regimes this includes a requirement to publish an annual report once a year. It also includes a requirement to publish notices of final orders.

    53. The Government notes with interest the Committee’s suggestions to match CFIUS’s annual reporting and agrees that there is value in looking at how international counterparts report on their systems. Direct comparisons between different investment security systems are difficult due to differences in the way systems operate and the way that data is reported. But as the Committee has recognised, if it looks at the information the Government publishes under the NSI system, the UK is amongst the most transparent internationally.

    54. The Government seeks to balance its commitment to transparency with the need to prioritise its available resource to operate the NSI system successfully. Consequently, at this time the Government is not considering a twice yearly report, and instead will continue to prioritise regular guidance updates and the Annual Report. Following the end of the reporting year on 31st March 2024, officials are now preparing this year’s Annual Report, which will be published in the coming months. The Government will consider how our regular reporting on the operation of the NSI system compares with international counterparts in preparing this year’s confidential annex to the Annual Report for the Committee.

  • PRESS RELEASE : UK and ASEAN deepen ties on financial services via the new ASEAN-UK Financial Services Collaboration Package [April 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : UK and ASEAN deepen ties on financial services via the new ASEAN-UK Financial Services Collaboration Package [April 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 18 April 2024.

    The UK and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) have agreed to work in partnership on some key issues shaping the financial services sector.

    The ASEAN-UK Financial Services Collaboration Package, agreed by ASEAN’s Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors at the 11th ASEAN’s Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors’ Meeting (11th AFMGM) on 05 April 2024, Luang Prabang, Lao PDR, is a comprehensive set of initiatives designed by UK experts to support ASEAN’s goals and boost the UK-ASEAN relationship. The Package brings together leaders from the UK’s private and public sector to work with ASEAN decision-makers on ways to achieve their vision for deeper financial integration across Southeast Asia.

    The ASEAN-UK Financial Services Collaboration Package will focus on three areas, key to global financial services trade.

    1. Market Infrastructure

    ASEAN is committed to a resilient, transparent, and forward-looking approach to market infrastructure, allowing businesses to operate with greater certainty. Through the Package, the UK will share its own policy experience to support ASEAN in ensuring that these regulatory developments are keeping up with global trends and challenges.

    2. Green Finance

    ASEAN is well-placed to be a leader in green growth. Global trends show that adopting greener practices can have real benefits for companies, including increasing profitability and lowering operating costs, increasing competitiveness and resilience, and opening access to new markets and sources of finance. Through the Package, the UK will share our experience and expertise to support ASEAN’s goal to meet international standards, learn about financial products designed to deliver high value sustainable infrastructure, and increase the flow of green capital.

    3. Access and Inclusion

    ASEAN is home to a diverse and rapidly growing population, with many individuals and businesses currently underserved by traditional financial institutions. Through the Package, the UK will foster partnership with ASEAN to create innovative and inclusive financial solutions that meet the needs of ASEAN’s growing market. This strand will focus on support for small businesses.

    “This marks a step change in ASEAN-UK relations”, said the UK’s Ambassador to ASEAN, Sarah Tiffin.

    She added:

    The UK became a Dialogue Partner to ASEAN in 2021 and is committed to supporting ASEAN’s economic and financial integration to boost ties between our businesses and our citizens. Given the UK’s leading global role in Financial Services, it has been identified as a top priority for ASEAN-UK economic collaboration. This Financial Services Package will deliver on those commitments, bringing together the best of UK private and public sector experience to engage directly with ASEAN counterparts. With the ASEAN-UK Economic Integration Programme also rolling out across the region, the UK is reinforcing our credentials as a strong Dialogue Partner for ASEAN across the vital economic agenda.

    A key feature of the Package is the central role world leading British banking and financial institutions play. The Package is a demonstration of government and the private sector working hand-in-hand to share expertise with ASEAN.

    The United Kingdom and ASEAN are natural partners when it comes to financial inclusion, sustainable finance and market infrastructure”, said Surendra Rosha, co-Chief Executive of HSBC Asia-Pacific.

    He said:

    ASEAN is one of the world’s fastest growing trade blocs and one of the most promising digital economies, with a big role to play helping the world get to net zero. As one of the largest financial groups in the UK, with deep roots throughout Southeast Asia, HSBC is proud to support this cooperation, which will undoubtedly benefit our customers.

    Standard Chartered have also welcomed the Package.

    “This Package reflects the close partnership between the UK public and private sectors to support ASEAN’s ambitions in financial integration, financial inclusion, and green finance”, said Patrick Lee, Cluster CEO for Singapore and ASEAN Markets, Standard Chartered.

    He added:

    As a global trade bank with origins in the UK and our longstanding and deep-rooted presence in ASEAN, we are committed to sharing our financial services expertise and capabilities – alongside other leading UK institutions – with ASEAN and ASEAN member states. The benefits of this collaboration for us and our clients in the region are clear: we believe it will bring greater regional connectivity, grow opportunities for green investments, and enhance access to financial services in the region.

    Speaking from London, Nicola Watkinson, Managing Director at TheCityUK, described the Package as:

    An exciting step forward in deepening business ties between the UK and ASEAN markets. The financial and professional services industry plays a vital role in the economic growth of both the UK and ASEAN, helping to fund vital infrastructure, address climate change, and support households with their everyday needs. It is great to see the ASEAN Finance Ministers’ meeting identified tangible ways we can collaborate now that the UK is a Dialogue Partner. We look forward to working with the UK Mission to ASEAN and industry partners to capture the benefits offered by this initiative.

    His Majesty’s Trade Commissioner to Asia Pacific, Martin Kent, said:

    I am delighted that the UK and ASEAN are deepening our partnership on financial services. The UK is a leading financial hub, as Europe’s top destination for inward investment stock and London being home to some of the strongest capital markets in the world. The UK already exports £1.9 billion worth of financial services to ASEAN, and this is only set to grow. I look forward to the innovations and partnerships that will come out of this Package.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Young people, especially women and girls, should be meaningfully included in discussions that affect their futures: UK statement at the UN Security Council [April 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Young people, especially women and girls, should be meaningfully included in discussions that affect their futures: UK statement at the UN Security Council [April 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 17 April 2024.

    Statement by Ambassador Barbara Woodward at the UN Security Council meeting on security challenges in the Mediterranean.

    President, to achieve lasting peace, the whole of society is required to participate in building it. Without the diverse perspectives that youth and marginalised groups represent, we will struggle to build peaceful, prosperous, and sustainable societies.

    I wish to make three points.

    First, the Secretary-General’s Peacebuilding Fund is a key instrument promoting the positive role of young people as agents of peace. The UK has provided over $35 million to the Peacebuilding Fund since 2020, which has implemented youth-related projects, including in Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Libya. We welcome the implementation of the Peacebuilding Commission’s Strategic Action Plan on youth and peacebuilding, including the annual meeting on youth, peace and security, as well as efforts to integrate analysis that is sensitive to this agenda into the commission’s key deliverables.

    Second, there is clear evidence that young people, especially young women and girls, are disproportionately impacted by climate change and biodiversity loss, often exacerbated by existing inequalities. But they are also agents of change in the response. In the Mediterranean region, heat waves, floods, sandstorms, and water stress contribute to the loss of food security and livelihoods, directly affecting the drivers of migration. We need to manage, carefully, the emerging challenges and opportunities of migration, including by recognising the role of young people in delivering adaptation solutions that provide people with options for sustainable livelihoods that do not compel them to migrate.

    Third, young people live with the effects of conflicts they did not start. Young people, especially women and girls, should be meaningfully included in discussions that affect their futures, including in this Council. So we should translate our commitments into action by strengthening their full, equal, safe and meaningful inclusion in decision-making and peace, development and mediation processes.

    President, we will continue to work with the international community to amplify youth voices and harness their lived experience across peace processes and the work of government.

    I thank you.

  • PRESS RELEASE : The Forum for Security Co-operation’s work remains vital – UK statement to OSCE [April 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : The Forum for Security Co-operation’s work remains vital – UK statement to OSCE [April 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 17 April 2024.

    Ambassador Neil Holland thanks Croatia, as incoming Chair of the Forum for Security Co-operation, for keeping the spotlight on Ukraine.

    Thank you, Mr Chair, dear Mario, for setting out Croatia’s priorities for the Forum for Security Co-operation (FSC) this trimester.  As you execute the mandate of this Forum at a critical time for European Security, you can count on our full support.

    Today marks 783 days since Russia’s unprovoked, full-scale and illegal invasion of Ukraine.  Actively facilitated by Belarus.  An invasion that continues to transgress OSCE principles and commitments.  Principles including sovereignty, territorial integrity and the right to be party to alliances.  Principles which Russia and Belarus co-wrote.  Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was not a failure of the OSCE’s principles and instruments.  It was a failure of Russian political will to implement its commitments faithfully.

    Since 24 February 2022, the Ukrainian people have defended their homeland heroically.  Each week, we have supported Ukraine.  And each week, we have condemned President Putin’s strategic mistake of invading a sovereign neighbour.  The FSC’s work – through its tools and the principles it upholds – remain vital for security in the OSCE area.

    We welcome your proposed FSC agenda which keeps the FSC spotlight on Ukraine.  We particularly welcome your joint FSC-PC Security Dialogue on Women, Peace and Security.  We must continue to champion women’s full, equal, meaningful, and safe participation in political and peace processes.  We must do so whilst also tackling gender-based violence, including conflict-related sexual violence.  The UK also supports your other Security Dialogues, including on Humanitarian Mine Action and Military Education.

    Mr Chair, last trimester we condemned the Russian delegation for blocking consensus – again – on a FSC Security Dialogue on International Humanitarian Law.  We called out the Russian delegation’s continued misbehaviour – including its threats to future FSC Chairs.  This behaviour has no basis in our rules.  Once again, we urge the Russian delegation to stop blocking consensus on FSC dialogues – and to return to the diplomatic decorum that the rest of us practice.

    I wish to conclude by welcoming Denmark to the FSC troika, and to thank Canada for their work as they leave the troika.  And most importantly, I wish you, Mr Chair, dear Mario, and your able team here in Vienna and in Zagreb the best of luck this trimester.  You can count on the full support of me and my delegation.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Statement on the UK – U.S. SME Dialogues – Northern Ireland [April 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Statement on the UK – U.S. SME Dialogues – Northern Ireland [April 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business and Trade on 17 April 2024.

    Statement follows the eighth meeting of the UK – U.S. SME Dialogues in Belfast, Northern Ireland.

    On 16 April 2024, the 8th UK – U.S. SME Dialogue was held in Belfast, Northern Ireland with over 85 UK and U.S. small and medium-sized businesses and business organisations participating.

    The Dialogue is convened by the Department for Business and Trade with the Office of the United States Trade Representative, the Department of Commerce, and the Small Business Administration. We were delighted to have the United States Special Envoy to Northern Ireland for Economic Affairs, Joseph Kennedy III, attend the Dialogue and speak about the importance of the UK-U.S. relationship and the special place Northern Ireland has in that partnership.

    SMEs are the backbone of the UK-U.S. trading relationship, and the Dialogue reflects the ongoing commitment from both countries to supporting and enhancing UK – U.S. SME trade.

    During the Dialogue, attendees discussed the opportunities for SMEs in the Creative Industries, Intellectual Property and how SMEs can harness digitalisation to expand their business and grasp the opportunities of the digital economy. Attendees also discussed the barriers that SMEs face in exporting and importing, including access to SME finance.

    Northern Ireland has a unique trading position and is a story of energy, creativity and innovation leading the way in future technologies and creative industries, making it one of the most exciting areas to do trade in the UK.

    We know that SMEs play a huge part in spurring local economies. That’s why, we are committed to working together to forge closer trade and investment ties with the U.S. and taking practical steps to enable our two countries to do business with each other more easily.

    During the Dialogue, we announced the launch of the UK and U.S. Intellectual Property (IP) toolkits, which have been produced to inform UK and U.S. SMEs about protecting their IP within the other country and the tools available to help them.

  • PRESS RELEASE : £1.3 million to back cutting-edge transport projects [April 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : £1.3 million to back cutting-edge transport projects [April 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Transport on 17 April 2024.

    Organisations and academics can apply for TRIG funding to research innovative ideas to improve transport in the UK.

    • new government competition to encourage innovative UK transport projects
    • a total of £1.3 million on offer to winning entries, boosting the economy and UK companies
    • new category for solutions to transport challenges in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland

    A £1.3 million competition to transform the transport sector, grow the economy and inspire innovation has been launched today (17 April 2024).

    The latest round of the government’s Transport Research and Innovation Grant (TRIG) is now open, with organisations and academics able to win up to £45,000 in funding.

    The TRIG scheme, delivered by Connected Places Catapult, supports businesses and academics working on innovative ideas in the early stages of their research. It aims to improve transport across the country and support skilled UK jobs as part of the government’s plan to help grow the economy.

    Previous TRIG winners have gone on to improve the passenger experience across the country through:

    • better connecting rural communities with a shuttle bus app
    • ensuring people can stay online whilst travelling by sea by expanding 5G data coverage
    • using AI technology to provide real-time insights to authorities on how local transport is being used so it can be improved
    • trialling the use of hydrogen to make plane and boat journeys greener.

    Decarbonisation, Aviation and Technology Minister, Anthony Browne, said:

    As part of our plan to improve transport across the country, we’re continuing to back the TRIG competition which has funded hundreds of cutting-edge projects over more than a decade.

    Today’s competition launch means projects in their early stages can win tens of thousands of pounds to help improve transport and support skilled UK jobs in the process.

    This year’s competition is seeking proposals focused on:

    • nation specific transport solutions – a new category for projects that address specific transport challenges in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland to level up the whole of the UK’s transport system and boost connectivity
    • local transport decarbonisation – innovative ideas that accelerate the decarbonisation of local transport systems, demonstrating an understanding of the needs of local areas and communities, whilst also having the potential to be scaled up across the UK in the future
    • maritime decarbonisation – maritime solutions that reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the UK’s maritime sector to support the transition to net zero
    • critical and emerging technologies – ideas that utilise critical technologies, such as AI, or any emerging technologies, such as drones, to enable a resilient transport system delivering cheaper, cleaner, and quicker journeys for all
    • open call – wider solutions that have the potential to address a UK transport challenge, across the entire network, challenges and technology areas

    This follows the success of last year’s TRIG competition, which saw 41 projects win funding, including a project that uses AI to reduce train station overcrowding, and a self-driving parcel delivery boat to reduce road congestion.

    Applications for this year’s competition open today and close on the 21 May 2024.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Government ramps up work to secure supplies of medicines and smartphone chips [April 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Government ramps up work to secure supplies of medicines and smartphone chips [April 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Business and Trade on 17 April 2024.

    Government has taken further action to help secure the UK’s supplies of critical goods with the launch of the new Critical Imports Council.

    • Government takes action to safeguard flows of vital goods such as medicines and smartphone chips with new Critical Imports Council.
    • New Council brings together 23 industry experts and will advise on securing resilience in UK supply chains of critical goods.
    • Council’s first meeting marks key milestone building on government’s Critical Imports and Supply Chains Strategy launched in January.

    Government has taken further action to help secure the UK’s supplies of critical goods such as medicines and smartphone chips with the launch of a new Critical Imports Council today (17 April).

    The Council is made up of 23 industry leaders and brings together expertise from business, academia and government to advise on securing resilience in supply chains for items critical to the UK’s economic prosperity, national security and essential services.

    It builds on the Government’s first-of-its-kind Critical Imports and Supply Chains Strategy, launched in January, and will allow business and government to work together in implementing the Strategy’s 18 actions – ensuring businesses have a central voice in shaping government’s work to build supply chain resilience.

    The events of recent years have shown the world we cannot afford to take for granted the resilience of the global supply chains we rely on for our critical imports. Recent attacks in the Red Sea, the COVID-19 pandemic, Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, and environmental disasters have all demonstrated the potential impact of global events on the reliable flow of vital goods.

    Imported goods are crucial to our economy. They ensure lower prices, greater choice, and help businesses to be more productive. They also enable innovation, drive growth, and are essential to the UK’s world-leading industries, from aerospace to life sciences.

    Business and Trade Minister and Chair of the Critical Import Council Alan Mak said:

    It’s never been more important to strengthen our supply chains and make sure vital goods can continue reaching consumers, in the face of the pandemic, the Red Sea attacks and many other crises around the world.

    That’s why we’re now going even further to strengthen our critical goods supplies with the launch of this new Council, which will bring together government and industry experts to help protect businesses from supply chain shocks now and in the future.

    Leading UK businesses including Rolls-Royce and Johnson Matthey will sit on the Council to help the UK develop resilient and secure supply chains that protect both business and the consumers who rely on them.

    The Council will work with government to tackle the supply challenges businesses face and develop real-life solutions. Meeting quarterly, they will collaborate on emerging supply chain risks and identify the support UK businesses need to reduce vulnerabilities in supply chains – including how we use our overseas network in more than 100 countries to connect with new suppliers.

    The Department for Business and Trade will also create a new online portal where businesses can report red tape or supply chain problems, allowing work to start on resolving the issues quickly.

    Andy Walker, Technology Director at Johnson Matthey said:

    Supply chain resilience of critical goods is essential for Johnson Matthey, so it’s great to be part of the Critical Imports Council, in which government, industry and academia will work together to agree the best approaches to implement actions identified within the Critical Imports and Supply Chains Strategy.

    Rhett Hatcher, CEO of UK Chamber of Shipping said:

    As an island nation the UK relies on shipping to deliver its energy, food and medical supplies with billions of pounds worth of imports each year.

    In an unpredictable world, it is vital that the UK government acts to improve the UK’s resilience to global supply chains shocks. The establishment of this Council is an important step and will enable us to work together to tackle our collective challenges.

    I look forward to joining other leaders from across our supply chains, government and academia to ensure that we have robust UK supply chains helping our economic prosperity, national security and essential services.

    Richard Torbett, ABPI Chief Executive, said:

    Supporting and safeguarding the resilient supply of medicines and vaccines to the NHS is critical to the wider health and wealth of UK citizens, which is why the work of the Government’s new Critical Imports Council is so important.

    I look forward to working with others to maintain and further improve the UK’s robust and responsive medicines supply.

    Logistics UK Chief Executive David Wells OBE said:

    Logistics UK’s seat on the Critical Imports Council recognises the vital role that the logistics sector plays in ensuring the success of the UK economy, and we welcome the government’s invitation to join the discussions, building on the knowledge we amassed during the pandemic.

    The breadth of experience on the council is exceptional and, working together, we can develop practical solutions to secure the UK’s supply chains and mitigate risks to the flow of essential goods to UK households, businesses and public services.

    The Critical Imports and Supply Chains Strategy will enable government to share vital information and guidance with businesses on the risks to key supply chains and the practical steps they can take to protect themselves from disruption, including regular updates on emerging supply chain risks, such as new export bans on critical everyday goods imposed by other countries.

    Please see below the full list of members attending today’s Critical Imports Council:

    • ADS Group
    • Association of British Healthtech Industries
    • Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry
    • BAE Systems
    • BASF
    • British Chambers of Commerce
    • British Generic Manufacturers Association
    • BT
    • Chemical Business Association
    • Cranfield School of Management
    • Critical Minerals Association
    • Institute of Export and International Trade
    • Tech UK
    • Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
    • Johnson Matthey
    • Logistics UK
    • Make UK
    • Maritime UK
    • Renewable UK
    • Rolls-Royce
    • Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT)
    • UK Chambers of Shipping
    • UK Trade Policy Observatory

    Background:

    The Department for Business and Trade published the first-of-its-kind Critical Imports and Supply Chains Strategy in January 2024.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Multi-million pound funding boost for home-grown video game developers [April 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Multi-million pound funding boost for home-grown video game developers [April 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport on 17 April 2024.

    More than £3 million of government funding has been awarded to emerging video game developers and start-up studios to help them scale their businesses and create the next British gaming hits.

    • 22 rising star video game studios receive awards from UK Games Fund
    • £3 million worth of grants to help companies get games in development ready for market
    • Funding awarded as part of government plans to grow creative industries by £50bn by 2030

    Grants of up to £150,000 from the UK Games Fund (UKGF) will help 22 high-potential games companies hire more staff, secure publishing deals and unlock more private investment.

    The funding has been awarded to companies across the UK including GLITCHERS, a Bafta-nominated studio that has used video games to teach children about money and help scientists fight dementia. Their grant will help them develop The Last Eden – a first-person game set in the rainforests of the Congo Basin where players can track wildlife guided by real-world experts.

    Meanwhile Triangular Pixels, another Bafta-nominated studio known for their innovative virtual reality technology, will use their Content Fund grant to develop Unseen Diplomacy 2 – a VR spy game where players can turn their living rooms into real-life assault courses.

    As part of the Creative Industries Sector Vision launched last year, the government invested an extra £5 million in the UKGF to establish a new Content Fund – focused on getting UK games in development ready for market – taking total government investment in the UKGF between 2022 and 2025 to £13.4 million.

    In 2023 the UK video game consumer market was worth £7.8 billion*, more than doubling its value since 2013. Some of the world’s best-selling video games have been made in the UK, including Tomb Raider, the Grand Theft Auto series, Little Big Planet and Lego: Star Wars.

    Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer attended the London Games Festival’s Game Changer event at Carlton House Terrace in Central London today (Wednesday 17th) where she met with Content Fund winners. She saw first-hand the games that their grants will help them to develop and heard how the money will support them to expand their businesses.

    Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer said:

    Video games are a vital part of this government’s plans to grow the creative industries by £50 billion by 2030. That’s why we are supporting talented new developers to maximise their potential and turn their ideas into the next best-selling, Bafta-winning titles.

    This funding will help them to secure investment and resources to scale up their businesses and create new jobs. Congratulations to all the recipients.

    The Content Fund provides UK games studios with grants of £50,000 to £150,000 to support the development of intellectual property, allowing them to attract more investment. Investing in video games at this crucial development stage will help UK studios grow their businesses and create more jobs, and in turn grow the economy, which is one of the Government’s five key priorities.

    Maxwell Scott-Slade, Director of Games, GLITCHERS:

    Earning recognition from the UK Games Fund for The Last Eden is a tremendous honour. This award empowers us to expand beyond dementia awareness (with projects like Sea Hero Quest) and delve into the captivating world of biodiversity. The Content Fund’s support allows us to make three crucial hires, which will significantly strengthen our position when negotiating with key partners.

    Katie Goode, Creative Director, Triangular Pixels:

    We’re immensely grateful for the incredible support that has allowed Unseen Diplomacy 2 to become a reality. As a British studio, it’s particularly exciting to see the continued investment in our homegrown games industry. This funding fuels our passion to bring this innovative VR spy experience to life, and we can’t wait to share more updates as development progresses.

    Paul Durrant OBE, CEO and Founder, UK Games Talent and Finance CIC, said:

    This growth-focussed funding has given us the opportunity to support companies further on in the journey than we’ve done before. Our focus on larger-scale grants, linked to unlocking additional leverage, adds a significant layer to the UK’s early-stage games development ecosystem. The grants will accelerate these studios towards success more rapidly than otherwise possible.

    Since 2015 the UKGF has invested over £12 million to help more than 450 developers and studios create their own video games. Previously funded companies include Coatsink, Futurlab and Roll7, whose title Rollerdrome won the Bafta for Best British Game last year.

    Alongside the Content Fund, UKGF continues to award grants of up to £30,000 to upcoming video game developers and early-stage studios to help them turn their drawing board ideas into working prototype games and showcase these to investors. UKGF also supports graduate talent development through its DunDev and Tranzfuser programmes.

    UK video games companies can still apply for grants from the remaining portion of the £5 million Content Fund.

    ENDS

    Notes to editors:

    • *This figure has not been adjusted for inflation.
    • Read more about the 22 studios that have been awarded funding.
    • The UK Games Fund is run by non-profit UK Games Talent and Finance Community Interest Company (UKGTF). UKGF launched in 2015 and is based in Dundee.
    • The UKGF Content Fund is just one of the ways the UK Government is supporting small-to-medium sized businesses. Find out more about other sources of support through the Government’s Help to Grow campaign.

    The 22 video game studios that have been awarded grants are:

    • Blazing Griffin (Glasgow)
    • Bonsai Collective (remote)
    • Companion Group (London)
    • Fumb Games (London and Surrey)
    • GLITCHERS (Edinburgh)
    • Hyper Luminal Games (Dundee)
    • Lucky Mountain Games (London)
    • Newfangled Games (Norfolk)
    • Nomad Games (Warrington)
    • Nyamyam (South East England)
    • Psytec Games (London)
    • ReadGraves (East of England)
    • Silent Games (Newcastle)
    • Singer Studios (London)
    • Size Five Games (Dorset)
    • Soul Assembly (Leamington Spa)
    • Spilt Milk Studios (remote)
    • Terra Tek Studios (London)
    • Tiny Rebel Games (Newport, Wales)
    • Triangular Pixels (Cornwall)
    • Warp Digital Entertainment (London)
    • Variable State (London)
  • PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary to urge G7 partners to hold firm and step up support for Ukraine [April 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary to urge G7 partners to hold firm and step up support for Ukraine [April 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 17 April 2024.

    At the Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Italy the Foreign Secretary will urge G7 partners to keep up pressure on Putin as he continues his illegal war with Ukraine.

    • the Foreign Secretary will call on his G7 counterparts to increase support for Ukraine
    • G7 foreign ministers will reaffirm the need to prevent a regional war following Iran’s malign and dangerous attack on Israel
    • G7’s collective response to the escalating conflict in the Middle East, a more assertive China and irregular migration will also be on the agenda

    The Foreign Secretary is travelling to the G7 Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Italy today to urge his counterparts to keep up the pressure on Putin as he continues to wage his illegal war with Ukraine. The Foreign Secretary will reiterate to the G7 the UK’s commitment to Israel’s security and discuss with his counterparts how to de-escalate regional tensions.

    The Foreign Secretary will make clear that partners in Europe and the G7 must spend more, produce more and deliver more to ensure that Ukraine can secure the victory that it deserves. He will call on G7 partners to work together to agree a clear and ambitious way forward to use sanctioned Russian assets to support Ukraine. This builds on messaging delivered at the NATO Foreign Ministers’ Meeting in Brussels earlier this month.

    The G7 has collectively sanctioned close to $300 billion of Russian assets. Without sanctions, it is estimated that Russia would have over $400 billion to finance its war, enough to fund Putin’s invasion for another 4 years.

    The Foreign Secretary, David Cameron, said:

    Ukraine has our unequivocal support until it is victorious and achieves a just peace.  It is vital that we agree a way forward to use sanctioned Russian assets to support Ukraine and ensure Russia pays for the destruction it has wreaked.

    The Foreign Secretary will continue to call for the G7 to pilot more ambitious efforts to undermine Russia’s defence industrial complex, including by pushing third countries to counter attempts to circumvent sanctions. He will urge partners to be prepared to act against those who help Russia to supply its war machine.

    Responding to Iran’s failed and dangerous attack on Israel over the weekend, Mr Cameron and his counterparts will continue to call for restraint, asking those involved to consider the devastating consequences of an escalation in the conflict. The Foreign Secretary will campaign for coordinated sanctions against Iran, ensuring the G7 shows a united front against Iran’s malign activity in the region. The Foreign Secretary and the rest of the G7 will continue to work with allies in Europe and across the Middle East to stop the fighting in Gaza, pushing for an immediate pause to get aid in and hostages out, so there can be progress towards a sustainable, permanent ceasefire.

    Meetings will also cover a range of other priorities around the world, including a more assertive China, reform of financial systems and irregular migration.

    The G7 represents around 50% of global GDP and its shared economic strength is helping to make the world a fairer, more stable and prosperous place. Discussions will look into reforms to the international financial system, investment in developing nations and new partnerships that work towards conflict resolution and resilience to global challenges – particularly climate change. The G7 will further strengthen ties with nations in Africa at the meeting, promoting economic prosperity on the continent through trade and unlocking private sector cash to support their green transition – a campaign which is in everyone’s interest.

    Irregular migration, propped up by transnational organised crime groups, actively stands in the way of the G7’s efforts to encourage international prosperity. The Foreign Secretary will encourage his G7 counterparts to prioritise international engagement to tackle illegal migration at its root causes, so we can reduce irregular and dangerous journeys, protect lives and create growth.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary in Israel to press for de-escalation of Middle East tensions [April 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Foreign Secretary in Israel to press for de-escalation of Middle East tensions [April 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 17 April 2024.

    The Foreign Secretary is in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories for talks with Prime Minister Netanyahu, President Herzog and Foreign Minister Katz.

    • the Foreign Secretary is in Israel with German Foreign Minister Baerbock to discuss regional tensions and the conflict in Gaza
    • he has meetings with Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, President Herzog Foreign Minister Katz to reiterate the UK’s commitment to Israel’s security
    • the Foreign Secretary is in the OPTs to meet Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority Mohammad Mustafa

    The Foreign Secretary is in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories today (17 April) for high-level talks with Prime Minister Netanyahu, President Herzog and Foreign Minister Katz.

    During the visit to Israel, he will reiterate the Prime Minister’s message to Prime Minister Netanyahu that “calm heads must prevail.” He will stress UK support for Israel’s security and say that significant escalation is in no one’s interest, and would only deepen insecurity in the Middle East.

    The UK is calling for coordinated sanctions against Iran, who are responsible for so much of the malign activity in this region by backing Hamas, backing Hezbollah and backing the Houthi rebels.

    Lord Cameron will also continue to urge an immediate pause in the fighting in Gaza to get aid in and hostages out, to allow progress towards a sustainable ceasefire. The UK is playing a leading role in alleviating the suffering of the Palestinian people and diplomatic efforts to secure the safe release of hostages, including British nationals.

    The UK is now providing £3 million of additional funding for equipment to support UN and aid agencies at new and existing land crossings to get more aid into Gaza. The UK’s contribution will include trucks, forklifts, generators, fuel stores and lighting towers.

    Foreign Secretary David Cameron said:

    The situation is very concerning. It’s right to show solidarity with Israel. It’s right to have made our views clear about what should happen next.

    But it’s clear the Israelis are making a decision to act. We hope they do so in a way that does as little to escalate this as possible.”

    On the conflict in Gaza, he said:

    More than 6 months have passed since Hamas’ brutal terror attack on innocent civilians. I’m here to focus back the eyes of the world onto the hostage situation.

    192 days those people have been held Hamas should release them now and there is a good deal for them on the table. We need to see a pause in the fighting to get aid in and hostages out.

    The Foreign Secretary and Foreign Minister Baerbock will urge Israel to deliver on its promises of delivering more aid into Gaza through as many routes possible by land, sea and air. The Foreign Secretary will strongly press Israel to open Ashdod Port for aid deliveries, as they promised to do, so that thousands of tonnes of aid can be delivered. The UK is also focused on ensuring more aid can enter Gaza by land, particularly through the Erez crossing and increased hours at Kerem Shalom.

    Throughout this crisis, the UK and Germany have been united in their condemnation of Hamas’ atrocious terror attacks and support for Israel’s right to self-defence within international humanitarian law. The UK government has been working with partners across the region to secure the release of hostages, including British nationals and their families.

    The Foreign Secretary is in the OPTs to meet with the newly appointed Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority, Dr Mohammad Mustafa, to reiterate his support for the new Palestinian Authority government and the Palestinian people. In the West Bank, record numbers of Palestinians have been killed by settlers and Israeli forces while the economy grinds to a halt due to Israeli restrictions.

    The UK remains committed to providing serious, practical and enduring support to the Palestinian Authority as they take much-needed steps on reform, including setting out a pathway to democratic progress. And to working together to progress our shared objective of a two-state solution that guarantees security and stability for both the Israeli and Palestinian people.