£15 million has been awarded to the European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC) in Orkney to help it take advantage of one of the UK’s greatest natural assets – the seas around our coasts.

Backed by the UK Government and delivered through UKRI, the funding will expand EMEC’s world-leading tidal test facilities to enable tidal energy arrays to be demonstrated. The investment brings tidal energy closer to becoming a mainstream part of Britain’s energy mix, creating skilled jobs in coastal communities and supporting the government’s mission to make the UK a clean energy superpower.

This investment directly supports the ambitions of the FORWARD‑2030 project, providing the critical infrastructure needed to move from single‑device testing to array‑scale tidal demonstrations and commercial deployment.

On receiving the funding, Matthew Finn, EMEC’s Managing Director, said:

“This is a major boost for EMEC and the tidal energy sector. This investment will unlock vital infrastructure needed to move from single-device trials to multi-device demonstrations, accelerating the commercialisation of tidal power in the UK.

“By enhancing capacity for larger-scale arrays, Blue Horizon will enable the sector to benefit from economies of scale and reduce costs. The upgraded facilities will drive innovation in the technologies and systems required for large-scale tidal deployment worldwide, cementing the UK’s position as a global leader in tidal innovation, while driving industrial growth and strengthening energy security.”

The two other programmes announced today include the creation of pioneering medical imaging centres to help doctors detect diseases earlier and speed up treatment for patients, as well as a separate initiative focused to produce cutting-edge materials that will drive advances from lighter, more efficient aircraft components to long-lasting medical implants.

Science Minister Lord Vallance said:

“Britain has world-class researchers and a proud history of turning insight and ideas into innovation. Our job is to make sure those ideas don’t just stay in the lab, but become the treatments, technologies and products that improve lives in hospitals, homes and communities across the country.

“Government investment in projects like these – from helping to spot diseases earlier and developing new cancer therapies to taking advantage of our coastline to power the nation – will make a real difference to people and spark the economic growth hardworking communities deserve.

“This represents British research at its best – bringing together ideas, expertise, and technical know-how and turning it into impact.”

The projects announced today highlight how curiosity-driven research and a focus on national priorities and support for companies to scale up and grow will deliver sustainable, positive change for British people. This agile, focused and impactful approach won’t just put British expertise at the heart of innovations and breakthroughs delivering for people here at home, but which are transforming lives for the better all over the world.

Date: 24/02/2026