ClusterOS Regional Diagnostic
Liverpool City Region Combined Authority
Liverpool City Region Combined Authority's innovation footprint draws £3.64bn of UKRI lead-led funding across 3,572 grants spanning 4 active clusters, with Liverpool City Region Health Life Sciences (32%) the largest single cluster and Liverpool (32%) the dominant regional anchor by UKRI £.
The region shows low-confidence "Program–Narrative" stabilisation stacks at ecosystem grain — research narrative is reinforced by recurring programme launches rather than narrowing toward commercial scaling, with academic capacity reabsorbing the cluster's signal.
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Same data examined through five diagnostic lenses — Pipeline, Leverage, Triple Helix, Throughput, Collaboration. The interactive diagnostic is currently in private preview.
Sources: UKRI Gateway to Research (grants, outcomes); OpenAlex (publications); Companies House (spin-out lifecycle); DSIT (cluster mapping); Public investment data. Snapshot May 2026.
| Cluster | Regime | Dominant stalls | Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liverpool City Region Health Life Sciences | Permission-Validation | Coordinating Instead of Deciding, Stabilising Around Incumbents, Waiting for Permission | 86 |
| Liverpool City Region Advanced Manufacturing | Extraction-Permission (Triple) | Stabilising Around Incumbents, Re-proving Instead of Narrowing, Extracting Without Reinvesting | 91 |
| Liverpool City Region Digital Creative | Extraction-Narrative | Stabilising Around Incumbents, Re-proving Instead of Narrowing, Coordinating Instead of Deciding | 100 |
| Liverpool City Region Clean Energy | Permission-Validation | Coordinating Instead of Deciding, Stabilising Around Incumbents, Re-proving Instead of Narrowing | 87 |
Dominant stacks · Most common stabilisation patterns in the region
Value extraction events generate narrative about ecosystem success; narrative legitimises continued extraction by framing it as ecosystem contribution; uncertainty about whether extraction is harmful absorbed by the success narrative.
Intermediaries produce narrative about their facilitation role; narrative legitimises intermediary existence and funding; uncertainty about direct coupling absorbed by narrative rather than demonstration.
Incumbents extract value while functioning as permission gatekeepers; waiting for permission delays autonomous actor formation; incumbent centrality reinforces the permission architecture that sustains extraction.
Re-proving generates narrative material; narrative legitimises continued waiting for external validation; waiting extends the re-proving cycle; all three signals absorbed simultaneously making the system appear active while deferring commitment.
Re-proving requires coordination to appear credible; coordination requires permission to proceed; waiting extends the re-proving cycle; all three signals absorbed by the validation-permission loop.
Top leverage hypotheses
"If one public report (e.g., annual ecosystem review, Combined Authority performance report) separated extraction metrics (capital leaving region, talent exiting to non-regional employers, IP licensed to external entities) from retention metrics (capital reinvested locally, talent employed regionally, IP commercialised by regional actors) for 2 years, it might reduce the system's ability to absorb uncertainty about extraction through success narratives by making the difference visible."
"If one coordination decision (e.g., funding allocation, network convening, strategy priority) were made without routing through anchor institutions (P018: Peel Ports, University of Liverpool, Mersey Maritime), it might reduce the system's ability to absorb disruption signals through incumbent-mediated coordination."
"If one infrastructure actor (e.g., Port of Liverpool, Electricity North West) deployed a clean energy asset without prior consortium formation or national funding approval, it might expose whether the validation-permission loop is structurally necessary or behaviourally chosen."