First projects funded by Local Innovation Partnership Fund

£30 million has been earmarked for Liverpool City Region (LCR) to boost high-potential innovation clusters.

The first two projects to be funded in the LCR through UK Research and Innovation’s (UKRI) Local Innovation Partnership Fund (LIPF) have been announced.

Led by the University of Liverpool, they are set to receive £23.7 million.

The funding has been agreed locally by the LCR Local Innovation Partnership Group, and is the first allocation from £30 million earmarked for the City Region in July 2025.

Led by UKRI, the national £500 million LIPF is designed to support the development and scaling of high-potential existing and emerging innovation clusters across the UK.

All projects must involve academia, industry and government and deliver real world impact, advancing knowledge, improving lives and driving growth.

Boosting LCR’s capabilities

The two cutting-edge projects funded in Liverpool will further boost the City Region’s distinctive, world-leading capabilities in:

  • materials chemistry
  • infection prevention and control
  • artificial intelligence (AI) solutions and emerging technologies
  • the convergence of these areas

The announcement comes at the start of the LCR Innovation Investment Fortnight at which more than £2 billion of investment opportunities will be showcased at over 25 events.

AIM-HI

The University of Liverpool’s AIM-HI programme has received £15 million to build on the success of the Materials Innovation Factory and create a new high-growth chemical super cluster in the City Region.

It is matched by £30 million of industry funding.

Critical to the UK’s manufacturing base and accounting for 9% of manufacturing jobs in the North West, the chemical sector faces challenges including translational gaps.

AIM-HI will address these, bridging academic work on AI for chemistry and industry to ensure its full commercial exploitation.

National Biofilms Innovation Centre: Liverpool Engine

The second project is the National Biofilms Innovation Centre: Liverpool Engine (NBIC-LIVE) programme.

It has received £8.7 million to establish the world’s first centre of innovation excellence dedicated to AI and machine learning-enabled rapid innovation of antimicrobial and anti-biofilm surfaces.

The NBIC-LIVE programme will establish the City Region as a global leader in this critical field.

Tackling biofilms, which are responsible for 80% of infections and major industrial costs, it will accelerate development and commercialisation of next-generation materials, reinforcing LCR’s leadership in advanced manufacturing and innovation.

Partnering with local ecosystems

Both projects showcase strong, mature partnerships between industry and academia and coordinated local ecosystems.

In the LCR, as well as involving academia, industry and local government, LIPF projects are required to ensure local communities are directly involved and benefit.

This reflects the City Region’s UK-leading approach to inclusive innovation and its drive to open up science, technology and research and development to everyone.

The £23.7 million investment is expected to unlock new opportunities for businesses to scale, support high-value job creation, and drive forward the development of new technologies with global impact.

It also reinforces the City Region’s long-term commitment to building an innovation-led economy, one that connects its academic excellence with industry demand to deliver tangible economic growth.

Innovation Investment Fortnight

Running from 1 to 12 June, this festival is bringing together:

  • international investors
  • businesses
  • researchers
  • policymakers

They will explore LCR’s distinctive place-based innovation assets, capabilities and other competitive strengths, UK-leading partnership-driven approach, and associated investment opportunities, in order to raise the LCR’s profile, create new linkages, and contribute to driving inclusive growth.

More than £2 billion of investment opportunities will be showcased across the two-week festival, which will feature more than 25 events covering topics including:

  • the city region’s strengths in life sciences innovation
  • maritime
  • games development
  • AI
  • sports science

Real economic value across the UK

Professor Sir Ian Chapman, Chief Executive Officer of UKRI said:

The Local Innovation Partnerships Fund exists to ensure that world-class research gets into the hands of local organisations and businesses to create real economic value in communities across the UK.

Liverpool City Region is demonstrating exactly how that works: taking deep scientific expertise in areas like AI-enabled chemistry and antimicrobial innovation and connecting it directly to industry and global markets.

This is how UKRI’s investment in places becomes investment in the nation’s future and helps achieve our mission to advance knowledge, improve lives and drive growth.

High-quality jobs and opportunities

Steve Rotheram, Mayor of the LCR said:

This funding is a major vote of confidence in the Liverpool City Region and our position at the forefront of global innovation.

We’re already building real strength in areas like artificial intelligence and advanced manufacturing, and this investment will help us accelerate that progress – turning cutting-edge research into high-quality jobs and opportunities for our communities.

It also comes at an important moment, helping us to launch our Innovation Investment Fortnight and put a spotlight on the scale of opportunity here.

We have the talent, the assets and the ambition – and with backing like this, we can continue to lead from the front, both nationally and internationally.

The power of partnership

Professor Tim Jones, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Liverpool said:

This new funding recognises the power of partnership between universities, industry and civic leaders.

Through AIM-HI and NBIC-LIVE, the University of Liverpool will help accelerate world-leading advances in AI-enabled materials chemistry and life science, while creating new opportunities for businesses, researchers and the LCR workforce.

The LCR LIPF projects will foster long-term economic growth and support high-value jobs whilst securing our region’s reputation as a global centre for scientific and technological innovation.

Further information

The Local Innovation Partnership Group, convened by the LCR Combined Authority, is made up of representatives from civic institutions, universities, industry, and the social economy.

The group makes funding decisions locally on the LIPF.

This is the website for UKRI: our seven research councils, Research England and Innovate UK. Let us know if you have feedback or would like to help improve our online products and services.