SMMT News

Jaguar Land Rover reveals future plans for R&D in the UK

24 September 2013 #SMMT News
  • Jaguar Land Rover confirms commitment to UK R&D with multi-million pound investment in a technology, innovation and education centre at the University of Warwick
  • National Automotive Innovation Campus (NAIC) construction begins September 2014
  • Research team size doubled to 1,000

Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) has unveiled plans for a £100 million R&D centre in Warwick that will employ 1,000 researchers and engineers.

The company expects to more than double the size of its advanced research team to 500 people by the time the NAIC opens in 2016. The new facility will complement JLR’s product creation centres in Gaydon and Whitley, to create a large-scale collaborative research environment.

The National Automotive Innovation Campus (NAIC) will bring academics from the UK’s leading universities together with researchers and engineers from JLR and the supply chain, in a single, multi-purpose, state-of-the-art research facility.

“The UK automotive industry is already world-renowned for its R&D and engineering capabilities, a fact that helps to attract significant investment from global automotive companies,” said Mike Hawes, SMMT Chief Executive. “The National Automotive Innovation Campus will help the UK stay at the forefront of automotive innovation, boosting government and industry efforts to enhance the domestic supply chain and manufacturing sectors.”

Jaguar Land Rover is the lead partner in the project investing £50m, along with Tata Motors European Technical Centre (TMETC), WMG (Warwick Manufacturing Group ) and the UK Government’s Higher Education Funding Council England (HEFCE).

Construction of the nearly £100m NAIC is scheduled to begin in September 2014 and will feature engineering workshops and laboratories, advanced powertrain facilities and the latest advanced design, visualisation and rapid prototyping technologies.

Dr. Wolfgang Epple, Director of Research and Technology, Jaguar Land Rover, said, “Investing in collaboration, innovation, research and education is vital if we want to be on a par with our international competitors. Our future sales success, the success of our global business – and the UK economy – lies in the engineering and innovation that will take place in NAIC.

“Creating a new national focus for automotive research and consolidating Jaguar Land Rover’s growing research and advanced engineering operations in one centre offers us huge potential. With a critical mass of research capability we will put the UK at the very centre of the global automotive industry – with the NAIC at its hub.”

The development of the NAIC project is the next stage in Jaguar Land Rover’s long-term research strategy and builds on the success Jaguar Land Rover has enjoyed as part of its long-standing relationship with WMG at the University of Warwick. Nearly 200 Jaguar Land Rover researchers and engineers are currently based at WMG, collaborating with university experts on a number of projects.

Commenting on the nature of work that would be carried out at the NAIC, Antony Harper, Jaguar Land Rover’s Head of Research, said projects would tackle, “long-term, multi-disciplinary challenges – such as electrification, smart & connected cars and Human Machine Interface – which will help us create some key new technologies that will deliver a low-carbon future.

“These collaborative research programmes will harness the best of UK engineering innovation, and with the extra capability the NAIC gives us, you can expect the number and range of new, fresh innovative ideas that we patent, and then take to production in the future, will increase significantly.”

As well as the skills and knowledge that will be developed within these research projects, NAIC will have a key role in developing the skills of school children and engineering students, who will be able to use NAIC’s laboratories and a dedicated engineering education facility.

Dr. Wolfgang Epple added: “Economic growth can only be sustained if we and our suppliers can find the right quality and quantity of skilled people. We need to ensure that we are inspiring people to consider engineering and encourage a passion for science, technology and maths from a young age.

“The NAIC will become a centre of training and skills to help ensure we have enough young people wanting to develop a career in engineering and manufacturing. NAIC will also play a key role in nurturing the next generation of engineers and technologists.”

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