According to www.logisticsmanager.com, the UK government has launched its second-year implementation of the Modern Industrial Strategy, prioritising ports, strategic land development, and supply chain resilience — including a £200m public finance commitment to Associated British Ports and the rollout of the Strategic Sites Accelerator.
Year-One Delivery and Q2 2026 Investment
The government’s Delivering the UK’s Modern Industrial Strategy: Year One report states that more than £380bn in private-sector commitments have been attracted to the strategy’s eight high-growth sectors since launch, supporting over 155,000 jobs across supply chains. The Industrial Strategy Quarterly Update: April–June 2026 adds that £25bn in investment commitments were secured during Q2 2026 alone, alongside £2.1bn in public finance support for UK businesses to scale and export.
Strategic Sites Accelerator and CBRE Partnership
A central logistics initiative is the Strategic Sites Accelerator, designed to bring forward investment-ready land across England and Wales. The programme is set to go live in the coming months, with CBRE appointed as the national delivery partner. According to the government, the accelerator will support site identification, feasibility assessments, and fast-tracked planning decisions — targeting locations where infrastructure upgrades, transport access, and zoning align with industrial growth priorities.
Port Infrastructure Investments
Ports feature prominently in the latest updates. The quarterly report confirms a £200m public finance commitment to Associated British Ports (ABP) to deliver major infrastructure upgrades across its UK network. This forms part of a broader £300m financing package co-funded by private-sector banks. Eligible projects include port infrastructure at Immingham, Lowestoft, Ipswich, and Solent Gateway.
- The Port of Tyne’s £150m, 230-acre redevelopment project is cited as a catalyst for up to 12,000 jobs in advanced manufacturing and clean energy.
- In Wales, up to £64m has been allocated to develop Port Talbot as the Celtic Sea’s first floating offshore wind port — projected to create up to 5,000 jobs.
Supply Chain Resilience Measures
To strengthen multi-tier visibility and reduce dependency risks, the government is launching a dedicated Supply Chain Centre. Central to this effort is the Global Supply Chains Intelligence Programme, which integrates commercial and government data with analytics and AI. The quarterly update also confirms £6.5m for the Advanced Manufacturing Supply Chain Innovation competition — funding SME-led projects aimed at strengthening domestic sourcing and reducing single-point failures.
Industry Feedback and Implementation Gaps
Industry groups acknowledge the strategy’s long-term vision but stress urgent delivery needs. Make UK, the manufacturers’ organisation, reported that 55% of surveyed manufacturers saw no benefits after one year, while only 3% reported significant gains. Its assessment urged a shift “from policy design to delivery”, citing delays in capital access, persistent cost pressures, and uneven rollout across regions and firm sizes.
Ben Fletcher, chief executive of Logistics UK, emphasized alignment between industrial and transport policy:
“The promised freight plan must be delivered at pace with clear delivery milestones.” — Ben Fletcher, chief executive of Logistics UK
He added that logistics underpins all UK industry and economic growth — meaning its role must be explicitly embedded in the government’s Integrated Transport Strategy, published in April 2026.
Source: logisticsmanager.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









