The Surrey Space Institute is taking off at the University of Surrey in Guildford. Its mission? To train 10% of the UK’s future space workforce in a growing sector which contributes billions to the country’s economy every year.
With the UK’s ยฃ19 billion space economy surging, government and industry urgently need faster research, innovation and skilled talent. Yet more than half of space organisations report critical shortages.
This is the challenge now being tackled by the newly launched Surrey Space Institute at the University of Surrey.
The Institute will convert the University’s 45-year small satellite leadership into mission-ready solutions for climate, resilience and secure global connectivity.
It will bring together the region’s wider reputation for innovation, bringing sector-strengths in cybersecurity, telecoms, legal and biosciences. The focus is helping the UK stay competitive in a global industry that is growing at pace.ย
It aims to scale up small businesses. It will also train 10% of the UK’s future space workforce through postgraduate degrees, hands-on missions and professional courses.
About the Surrey Space Institute
The Institute will build on the legacy of the Surrey Space Centre, whereย Professor Sir Martin Sweetingย pioneered the design and manufacturing of small satellites.ย
Sir Martin founded the highly influential Surrey Satellite Technology Ltdย (SSTL). This university spin-out helped reshape how satellites are built across the global space sector. It has since earned ยฃ1 billion in satellite exports for the UK.ย ย
The Surrey Space Institute has been developed under the leadership of renowned astrophysicist and Pro-Vice-Chancellorย Professor Bob Nichol.
It will build on the firm foundations that the university and wider region has in a range of sectors. This includes engineering, telecoms, cybersecurity, biosciences and law.
This interdisciplinary approach is at the heart of the new Institute’s mission โ to rethink how space can support society, the economy and the planet.
It will focus on building new technologies. And on developing the policies, systems and skills needed to run full space missions that respond to real-world needs.
Professor Adam Amara will be the inaugural Director of the Surrey Space Institute while continuing in his role as Chief Scientist to the UK Space Agency.
Benefits to Surrey and beyond
Space contributes ยฃ7.2 billion directly to the UK’s GDP. It supports more than 52,000 jobs, most of them highly skilled. And it continues to invest heavily in innovation, with ยฃ1 billion spent on research and development.ย
A key focus for the Surrey Space Institute Institute will be to help the UK grow its ability to run full space missions โ combining hardware, software, policy and operations to tackle problems such as water security, climate resilience and space sustainability.
The Institute will also support small space companies to scale up. It will also give more people the skills needed to work in this fast-moving sector, helping the UK stay competitive in a global industry that is growing at pace.ย
Currently 52% of UK space organisations reporting critical skills shortages, especially in software, data analysis, artificial intelligence and systems engineering. So the Institute aims to train 10% of the UK’s future space workforce through postgraduate degrees, hands-on missions and professional courses.
The launch of the Institute is timely, aligning with the Government’s industrial strategy, which recognises the space sector’s role in economic growth and UK defence capabilities.
In 2021/22, the UK space sector generated ยฃ18.9 billion in income, up 8% on the previous year, outpacing both the global space sector and the wider UK economy.
Surrey Space Institute – reaction
Professor Adam Amara, Head of School of Mathematics and Physics, said:
“Space is no longer a frontier activity; it is already a critical national and international infrastructure underpinning everything from climate security to high-speed connectivity.
“By uniting Surrey’s 45-year leadership in small satellites with cutting-edge AI and cyber-resilience, the Surrey Space Institute will give the UK the decisive capability it needs to stay ahead in the global space race and to solve complex problems at home and around the world.”
Martin Sweeting, founder of SSTL, said:
“The launch of the Surrey Space Institute is an exciting new chapter that captures that same entrepreneurial spirit as when we started the Space Centre. But it also reflects a much bigger ambition โ to shape how the UK delivers space-based solutions to the challenges we face here on Earth. That means training new kinds of experts, working across disciplines and building systems that are sustainable, inclusive and ready for global deployment.”
Dr Paul Bate, CEO of the UK Space Agency, said:
“The launch of the Surrey Space Institute represents exactly the kind of bold, forward-thinking approach we need to maintain the UK’s position as a leader in space. Surrey’s remarkable 45-year track record in small satellites, combined with its vision to tackle real-world challenges from climate resilience to space sustainability, demonstrates how academic excellence can drive both economic growth and societal benefit.
“As we work to deliver the Government’s space ambitions, partnerships like this โ bringing together world-class research, industry expertise and skills development โ are essential to ensuring the UK space sector continues to thrive and deliver for our economy, our security and our planet.”ย