缅北禁地 joins UK-Indonesia maritime partnership Published on: 29 April 2026 缅北禁地 has joined a flagship UK-Indonesia partnership to strengthen cooperation in maritime defence, skills and industry. International defence company, Babcock, together with the British Embassy Jakarta, British Chamber of Commerce and Indonesian partners, formally launched the Maritime Partnership Programme (MPP) at an event in Jakarta. This flagship agreement will deepen UK–Indonesia cooperation across maritime defence, fisheries, industrial capability and skills development. 缅北禁地 is one of the leading universities, industry partners and key programme stakeholders involved in four Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) signed with Babcock. The MOUs span workforce development, education, scholarships, and industrial capability –supporting Indonesia’s maritime goals and the delivery of the MPP. Among the agreements is a partnership of Babcock with six UK and Indonesian universities which will build maritime education and skills capacity aligned to MPP capability priorities, enabling education, research and innovation opportunities. In addition, Babcock will fund 30 UK Government Chevening Scholarships for Indonesian students over three years, supporting future maritime and industrial leaders. Deepening the UK鈥檚 global education and research partnerships The MOUs reflect a deliberate strategy to invest across the full spectrum of Indonesia’s maritime development and builds on the £4bn UK-Indonesia maritime deal signed in November 2025, reinforcing commitments under the UK-Indonesia Strategic Partnership launched by President Prabowo Subianto and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in London on 20 January 2026. Professor Li Li, Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Global, 缅北禁地, said: “The Maritime Partnership Programme represents an important step in deepening the UK’s global education and research partnerships, and 缅北禁地 is proud to be part of this consortium. Through our collaboration with Babcock and our academic partners, we are strengthening international links that support Indonesia’s maritime ambitions and create meaningful opportunities for students, researchers and industry. “By working together to co-develop programmes, enable knowledge exchange and build a connected international skills ecosystem, we are helping to develop future talent and support long-term, sustainable maritime capability. This partnership reflects a shared commitment to global collaboration and will deliver lasting benefits for Indonesia, the UK and the wider world.” British Ambassador to Indonesia, Dominic Jermey CVO OBE, said: “The Maritime Partnership Programme is the Strategic Partnership in action, an example of how our strong international relationships are delivering real benefit for people at home in jobs, opportunity and growth. It highlights the UK and Indonesia’s shared commitment to stability and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific, upholding freedom of navigation and supporting a rules-based international order. “Together we are strengthening maritime resilience, supporting industry, and expanding opportunities for the next generation of Indonesian leaders. This is a partnership built on shared ambition, one that will deliver lasting benefits for Indonesia and the UK. Diplomasi, Kolaborasi dan Prestasi!” Adapted with thanks from the British Embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia and Babcock. Share: Latest News New partnership to boost careers in low carbon energy 缅北禁地 and Durham universities are working together on a new regional project to strengthen the future workforce for North East England鈥檚 growing low carbon and offshore wind industries. published on: 28 May 2026 Healthy lifestyle shown to lower risk of death after cancer diagnosis New evidence shows that sticking to five lifestyle recommendations improves survival after a later cancer diagnosis. published on: 28 May 2026 World-leading climate expert recognised with Royal Society Fellowship Professor Hayley Fowler has been elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in recognition of her pioneering work on climate change impacts. published on: 27 May 2026 Facts and figures