One participant in the roundtables was able to achieve a £12.5 million reduction in energy costs, by harnessing the power of data to significantly improve resource efficiency.
This example shows that digitalisation is a key tool to help businesses understand their energy use and deliver both decarbonisation and cost reduction.
Digital technologies fall under the definition of capital assets, so there is scope for considerable investment to be made here while making use of capital allowances.
Floriane Fidegnon, Head of Industry, Technology and Innovation at Policy Connect and report author, said: “Now more than ever, manufacturers need the tools to ensure that their businesses are sustainable in the long term.
“Digital technologies can support this; however, business leaders need government’s support to be able to invest and deploy technology at scale. This report highlights the potential alignment between environmental and industrial policy, calling for key action now.”
Steve Evans, Chair of the IET’s Manufacturing Policy Panel, said: “Together, digitalisation and sustainability are the two most powerful forces that we are going to see in manufacturing over the next decade.
“Joint and synergistic action on both is now urgent and vital. We can’t afford to have separate digital and sustainability strategies.
“To deliver the ambitious C02 reduction target of 12MT as set out in the Government’s Decarbonisation Strategy, will require a gigantic effort from both digital and sustainability problem-solvers, on an industrial scale.
“Politicians and policymakers can help too by ensuring manufacturers have the business and financial support they need.”