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Spring – the UK water sector’s new Innovation Centre of Excellence – was launched on the 20th of December (https://spring-innovation.co.uk/). Spring has been set up to deliver the outcomes detailed in the water sector’s 2050 Innovation Strategy. Spring’s ‘minimum viable product’ is now live and illustrates the potential value it could bring for the sector and its customers. They are effectively throwing open the doors to all parts of the sector to join and support the innovation journey the whole sector needs to make for providing fully sustainable services to the UK’s water customers. Spring will also be a hub to enable business growth around the UK water sector. The successful innovations it supports can be highlighted to the international water community and hopefully add value in other countries.
Spring’s stated mission is to ‘connect, integrate and augment existing excellence within and outside the water sector, injecting innovation into the industry through learning and implementing best practices.’ Spring, it is hoped, could be game-changing for the innovation efforts of the water sector - welcoming in new players, sharing knowledge and best practice, hastening change, helping to deliver regulatory change, eliminating duplication and driving resource and cost-efficiency. It targets transformational change, aligned to the overlapping but distinct strategic innovation themes set out by Ofwat (the economic regulator in England and Wales for water services) and the sectors own 2050 strategy. These include major challenges such as mitigating climate change through achieving net-zero carbon, enhancing natural systems and the water environment, and ensuring infrastructure are resilient into the future. If Spring can land its remit, its implications could be felt well beyond water. Spring is a subsidiary of UKWIR (the Water Industry’s UK research company). This enables some resource sharing – for instance, IT and back-office systems. The two organisations are also obviously complementary; Spring can do in technology development what UKWIR already successfully does in research, tackling pressing common challenges centrally and efficiently. “Spring’s stated mission is to ‘connect, integrate and augment existing excellence within and outside the water sector, injecting innovation into the industry through learnings and best practices.’” So far, the team has co-created Spring under the careful eye of the UKWIR Board, and with the help of a wide range of stakeholders, including regulators, from across the whole sector and beyond. It has been designed through a series of collaborative workstreams using the Innovation Strategy published by UKWIR and Water UK to set the framework for delivery. The Spring team has engaged with over 80 organisations to understand their needs in more detail; before defining and validating user requirements; and engaging with specialist innovation organisations to ensure the services launched in December were just what was needed. As part of this ‘getting it right first time ethos’ the soft-launch of a skeleton website in the Autumn of 2021 set out the bones of what will become Spring’s service offering – which as of this year are two main services, underpinned by two cross-cutting ones: