Couverture de How We Build Britain

How We Build Britain

How We Build Britain

De : Rob Gilbert
Écouter gratuitement

A podcast about energy, infrastructure and industry. Exploring why Britain no longer seems to value building, making and engineering things… and what it would take to change that.

© 2026 How We Build Britain
Economie Finances privées Politique et gouvernement Sciences politiques
Épisodes
  • Tim Pick - Britain's First Offshore Wind Champion (recorded at Global Offshore Wind '26)
    Jun 17 2026

    Just how is the offshore wind industry in the UK really doing?

    I put that question to Tim Pick on the fringe of Global Offshore Wind 2026 in Manchester. Tim is Britain's first offshore wind champion, a former clean power commissioner, vice president of the Energy Institute and chair of the Offshore Wind Growth Partnership.

    We cover where the industry really stands, AR7 and the job of turning an allocation round into built projects, why Ardersier has upended the conventional wisdom on ports, the bet on floating wind in the Celtic Sea, and why the North Sea starts to sustain itself in the 2030s. Tim is also clear about the cost of politicising all this.

    The question underneath it all is the one this show keeps coming back to. Do we build, or do we buy?

    Feedback, guest suggestions and future episode requests are always welcome.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    31 min
  • Why investing in industry helps solve Britain’s NEET crisis
    Jun 3 2026

    A million young people in Britain are now not in education, employment or training, the highest level in over a decade. Alan Milburn’s interim review into young people and work has laid out the scale of it. This episode argues that underneath the headline numbers is a story about what happened to British industry, and that rebuilding it is part of the answer.
    The review’s findings are stark: more than a million 16 to 24-year-olds are NEET, six in ten have never had a job at all, and the cost runs to around £125 billion a year.

    As Britain’s industrial base declined, it took the way into work with it, the apprenticeships and vocational routes that asked for a start rather than a degree. You cannot fix worklessness without work, and for too many young people the first rung simply isn’t there any more.
    Part of why this is so hard to act on is how, over decades, we have come to measure the worth of public investment, counting the costs that land now more confidently than the returns that build slowly: industrial capability, supply chains, and jobs in the places that have waited longest for them.

    The episode makes the case for a broader idea of value, and sets out four things we need to do to act on it: count value differently, use what the state already buys, rebuild the routes into work, and let our institutions take long-term risk.

    If you find this podcast useful, please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    12 min
  • Why geography might be the answer to economic growth.
    May 20 2026

    I reflect on Great British Energy's first year and ask an honest question: what has actually changed for the places that have been on the wrong side of industrial decline for a generation? The answer is complicated, but there is a genuine reason for optimism. The coasts, the estuaries, the old industrial heartlands are, by an accident of physics and geography, exactly where the energy transition has to be built. For the first time in decades, the map of where the next economy needs to land overlaps with the map of where the last one was lost. But geography creates the opportunity; it doesn't guarantee it. I make the case for counting the social returns the system currently ignores

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    13 min
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
Aucun commentaire pour le moment