10 Nov 2025

Event Round Up: Breaking Ambition: How ARIA Unlocks Technical Breakthroughs

The Advanced Research + Invention Agency (ARIA) is the UK’s new R&D funding agency, created to empower scientists, engineers, and entrepreneurs to take bold bets at the edge of the possible. 

In this webinar, ARIA defined the opportunity spaces they're exploring, the kinds of high-risk, high-reward research they pursue, and how they back ambitious individuals and teams across startups, industry and academia to shape the future. 

Speakers included:  

  • Rory Daniels, Head of Emerging Technology and Innovation, techUK 
  • Tammy Thomas -Brown, Director of Procurement and Contracts, ARIA 
  • Pranay Shah, Product Manager, ARIA 

You can watch the full recording here, or read our summary of the key insights below:  

Please note that the below is a summary of the event, and readers are encouraged to watch the webinar to understand the full details of the discussion.   

Following an overview of techUK and the emerging tech programme, the session opened with an introduction to ARIA:  

  • ARIA was established in January 2023 through the ARIA Act to address the slow pace at which existing UK funding models were tackling the challenges and opportunities that science and technology can help solve. 
  • To accelerate the creation of transformative outcomes, ARIA represents a new approach to R&D that harnesses the strengths of the UK’s talent, industry, startups, and research base. Its mission is to unlock scientific and technological breakthroughs that deliver benefits for everyone. 

Pranay Shah, Product Manager at ARIA, then gave an overview of the Core tenets of ARIA:  

  • Bold and Long-term – The ARIA Act prevents the organisation from being shut down for ten years. This framework enables R&D to be pursued on a decade-long timeline and allows for a long-term view into the future, giving ARIA time to demonstrate meaningful impact. 
  • Breaking silos - Not only between disciplines, but also in terms of the institutions and organisations. ARIA fund everything from independent researchers and garages to big industrial corporates doing R&D and everything in between to break the organisational silos that often hamper progress. 
  • People then projects approach - When ARIA allocate funding and recruit programme directors, they lead with the individual: their motivation, track record, vision and ability to act come first. This allows programme directors to define what they believe the agency should invest in, and identify where the UK holds strengths, has strategic advantages, and can shape the future and re-define what’s possible. 
  • Science & entrepreneurship – ARIA support entrepreneurial scientists and building deep collaborations with industrial partners who can take that research out into practice. 

The session then explored how ARIA Works in Practice:  

  • Opportunity Spaces – Programme Directors define “opportunity spaces,” areas where there is potential for significant scientific or technological breakthroughs. These are published to outline the scope of opportunity and opened for feedback from relevant sectors. 
  • Programmes – From each opportunity space, a focused programme is launched with a clear, ambitious objective. Programmes typically consist of 12–20 projects that collectively work toward a shared “technical north star.” Each programme is published, enabling engagement and feedback from industry and academia. 
  • Opportunity Seeds – These are smaller, but ambitious projects aligned with an opportunity space that sit outside of formal programmes. They provide a mechanism for early-stage exploration and de-risking, allowing ideas to be tested before scaling. 
  • Activation Partners – ARIA works with Activation Partners who bring entrepreneurial talent, investment, and networks into their programmes. to build an ecosystem around their work.  

Tammy Thomas -Brown, ARIA’S Director of Procurement and Contracts, gave an overview of ARIA’s funding principles, including how they work in practice:  

  • Responsibility to the UK taxpayer – ARIA is publicly funded and therefore has a duty to use its resources responsibly and transparently to deliver public benefit. 
  • Institution- and location-agnostic – ARIA funds a wide range of organisations, from universities and established research labs to startups, SMEs, and entirely new entities to back the best ideas and people, regardless of background or location. 
  • Transformational, not incremental – ARIA focuses on bold, high-risk, high-reward research that can create step-change outcomes rather than incremental progress. 
  • Globally minded in reach – ARIA draws on the best talent and ideas globally to tackle the toughest challenges, while ensuring lasting benefit to the UK. 
  • Catalyse, not compete – ARIA structures IP conditions and funding models to be founder-friendly, designed to catalyse innovation and collaboration across the ecosystem rather than compete with it. 

The session concluded with an update on ARIA’s current initiatives, including an overview of their opportunity areas and activation partners. Find out more here. 

Contact ARIA  | Sign up for Updates  

For more information about this event, please contact:  

Ella Shuter

Ella Shuter

Junior Programme Manager, Emerging Technologies, techUK

Rory Daniels

Rory Daniels

Head of Emerging Technology and Innovation, techUK

Technology and Innovation programme activities

techUK bring members, industry stakeholders, and UK Government together to champion emerging technologies as an integral part of the UK economy. We help to create an environment where innovation can flourish, helping our members to build relationships, showcase their technology, and grow their business. Visit the programme page here.

 

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Meet the team 

Sue Daley OBE

Sue Daley OBE

Director, Technology and Innovation

Laura Foster

Laura Foster

Associate Director - Technology and Innovation, techUK

Kir Nuthi

Kir Nuthi

Head of AI and Data, techUK

Rory Daniels

Rory Daniels

Head of Emerging Technology and Innovation, techUK

Tess Buckley

Tess Buckley

Programme Manager - Digital Ethics and AI Safety, techUK

Usman Ikhlaq

Usman Ikhlaq

Programme Manager - Artificial Intelligence, techUK

Chris Hazell

Chris Hazell

Programme Manager - Cloud, Tech and Innovation, techUK

Elis Thomas

Elis Thomas

Programme Manager, Tech and Innovation, techUK

Ella Shuter

Ella Shuter

Junior Programme Manager, Emerging Technologies, techUK

Harriet Allen

Harriet Allen

Programme Assistant, Technology and Innovation, techUK

Sara Duodu  ​​​​

Sara Duodu ​​​​

Programme Manager ‑ Quantum and Digital Twins, techUK