UK Global Screen Fund to receive £7m funding, as government brings forward apprenticeship reform

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UK Global Screen Fund to receive £7m funding, as government brings forward apprenticeship reform

The UK government’s Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) has said it will invest £60m in the artistic industries in 2025,  including £

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The UK government’s Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) has said it will invest £60m in the artistic industries in 2025,  including £7m for the UK Global Screen Fund and will bring forward reform of the apprenticeship levy to August. 

The UK Global Screen Fund is administered by the BFI and backed by the DCMS. The initial £7m fund was launched in April 2021 under the previous Conservative government as a one-year pilot initiative to boost international development and distribution opportunities for the UK’s independent screen sector following the UK’s withdrawal from the European Union.

In 2022, the DCMS committed to a three-year extension. Recent films backed by its three funds include multi-Bafta nominated Kneecap, upcoming release The Salt Path and Laura Carreira’s well-received directorial debut On Falling. 

The government is also bringing forward changes so that shorter apprenticeships are available from August 2025, as one of our first steps towards a more versatile Growth and Skills Levy – something for which the UK screen industries has long been lobbying. 

The investment was unveiled ahead of the Creative Industries Growth Summit held today (January 17) in Gateshead, attended by some 250 artistic businesses and attended by screen industry representatives including Netflix and Warner Bros, as well as executives from organisatons including Creative England, Spotify, the National Theatre and the British Museum.

Culture secretary Lisa Nandy said the  priority regions for the artistic industries going forward are the North East, Greater Manchester, Liverpool City Region, West Yorkshire, West Midlands, Greater London, West of England, South Wales, Glasgow, Edinburgh-Dundee corridor, and Belfast. 

The government is also launching a ‘soft power council’ to assist drive investment. The council will act as an advisory board to the UK government and will bring together pliable power and foreign policy experts. 

The total £60m investment will be targeted at artistic businesses including start-up video game studios and grassroots music venues, with a focus on boosting exports of UK music and film. 

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