Overview
The Henry Royce Institute plays an important national role in convening the materials community and translating its expertise into strategic documents, reports and roadmaps that support UK research, innovation and industrial priorities. Through its position as the UK’s national institute for advanced materials, Royce brings together academic, technical, industrial and policy stakeholders to identify where materials innovation can address national challenges, unlock economic growth and strengthen the UK’s global competitiveness.
Through work linked to the National Materials Innovation Strategy, the National Framework for Materials 4.0, Royce National Materials Challenges and other policy-facing activity, Royce supports a more joined-up approach to materials innovation across the UK. Its outputs help articulate where advanced materials can contribute to national priorities, including economic growth, clean energy, sustainability, industrial resilience, digitalisation and emerging technologies.
A key value of this work is Royce’s ability to convene expertise from across academia, industry and government, translating complex technical insight into accessible, actionable recommendations. This helps inform future investment, strengthen cross-sector collaboration and support the development of capabilities that align with wider agendas such as the UK Government’s modern industrial strategy.
As materials innovation becomes increasingly important to global competitiveness, supply chain resilience and the transition to net zero, Royce’s strategic outputs also support the UK’s international positioning. By helping to frame national strengths and priorities in a global context, Royce is contributing to a growing role for the UK in international materials policy and innovation partnerships.
National Materials Innovation Strategy
The National Materials Innovation Strategy sets out a shared vision for accelerating advanced materials innovation across the UK. Facilitated by the Henry Royce Institute and developed with input from industry, academia, government and other stakeholders, it identifies opportunities where materials science can drive economic growth, improve productivity, support net zero, strengthen national resilience and create high-value jobs. The strategy highlights priority opportunity areas alongside cross-cutting themes such as sustainability and Materials 4.0, providing a framework to connect the UK’s research strengths with commercialisation, investment and long-term global leadership.
A National Framework for Materials 4.0: Pathways to Implementation
A National Framework for Materials 4.0: Pathways to Implementation sets out a coordinated approach to accelerating the digital transformation of materials innovation across the UK. Building on the National Materials Innovation Strategy and Royce’s earlier interim framework, it identifies the infrastructure, standards, governance and skills needed to connect materials data, digital tools and AI-enabled innovation across the full materials lifecycle. The framework provides a practical route towards more efficient discovery, manufacture, deployment, reuse and recycling, helping strengthen UK competitiveness, resilience and leadership in advanced materials.
A National Framework for Materials 4.0: Pathways to Implementation
A National Framework for Materials 4.0: Pathways to Implementation sets out a coordinated approach to accelerating the digital transformation of materials innovation across the UK. Building on the National Materials Innovation Strategy and Royce’s earlier interim framework, it identifies the infrastructure, standards, governance and skills needed to connect materials data, digital tools and AI-enabled innovation across the full materials lifecycle. The framework provides a practical route towards more efficient discovery, manufacture, deployment, reuse and recycling, helping strengthen UK competitiveness, resilience and leadership in advanced materials.
Materials Map of the UK: Unlocking Growth through UK Materials Innovation
The UK Materials Map provides a regional snapshot of the UK’s advanced materials capability, highlighting the businesses, clusters and sector strengths that underpin economic growth, industrial resilience and future innovation. Building on the evidence base behind the National Materials Innovation Strategy, it brings together data on materials businesses, employment, GVA and regional specialisms to help government, industry and researchers identify areas of existing strength and future opportunity. The Map provides a shared evidence base to support investment, collaboration and capability development across the UK materials ecosystem.
National Materials Challenges
Royce National Materials Challenges identify priority areas where advanced materials innovation can help address major national and global needs. Developed with input from the UK materials community, the challenges help focus research, investment and collaboration around areas of strategic importance, from energy and sustainability to healthcare, digitalisation and emerging technologies. By bringing together expertise across academia, industry and government, they provide a framework for building capability, addressing technology gaps and supporting the translation of materials research into real-world impact.