Annex B
Local Landscape
Clean Growth - indicative breakdown of projected skills requirements, incorporating the likely demand
drivers will come from Sizewell.
As has been mentioned elsewhere in this document ‘Clean Growth’ is the golden thread that runs
through our ambitions for Norfolk and Suffolk’s Local Industrial Strategy, leading to sustainable recovery
and growth. This is because clean growth offers the best chance for longer-term, inclusive, and
sustained growth, and which also aligns with our existing Norfolk and Suffolk Economic Strategy, which
runs to 2036.
We are not just assessing this opportunity through the lens of clean energy or clean tech so much as the
whole economy, as we foresee virtually every aspect of the local economy needing to become greener
and reducing carbon and greenhouse emissions.
We recognize this is a sizeable undertaking, and we have not yet assessed the scale and nature of the
potential challenges opportunities this will present, and the associated skills requirements with
achieving it.
However, we are getting a clearer understanding of the specific skills demands that our clean growth
ambitions will require. Along with assessments that relate to the more obvious clean growth sectors –
such as clean energy – we are considering the significance of digital skills and how these will support a
drive towards clean growth across all sectors.
From our Brexit Implications Report: January 2020 - Geographic & Sector Analysis:
National insurance registrations provide an indication of the number of non-UK individuals entering the
UK with the intention to work. While the level of international migration into Ipswich and Norwich is
high (12,964 and 10822, respectively), other local authorities have also experienced a high influx of
international workers.
Cities accommodate higher-skilled jobs which often offer higher remuneration. Economic migrants from
outside the EU face more restrictions to entering the UK than EU migrants, and so many will only do so
for jobs with higher pay. This is one explanation for the observed difference.
Most international migrants seeking employment outside of Norfolk and Suffolk’s two cities are from
within the EU. In North Norfolk, Breckland, King’s Lynn and West Norfolk, and Great Yarmouth, 93%,
92%, 90% and 89% of international migrants have been from countries within the EU. These authorities
contain a high proportion of jobs in the manufacturing, agriculture and energy sectors – often jobs that
are taken by EU migrants. This reflects the level of demand in Norfolk and Suffolk for EU migrant
workers in areas outside of the two main cities.
Below is a chart displaying the combined EU and Non-EU overseas National Insurance (NI) registrations,
over the past 5 years, broken down by local authority area.