Tech Secretary to cut red tape to make new technology available more quickly

10 March 2025, 16:24

Peter Kyle, Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology (PA)
Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg. Picture: PA

The RIO was launched in October and is intended to reduce the burdens for businesses looking to bring new products and services to the market.

Technology Secretary Peter Kyle has said he will cut red tape so that technology like medical delivery drones can be made available more quickly.

He told a tech conference that the Government would prioritise pro-innovation regulation in a dedicated plan for the sector, saying there is “no route to long-term growth and no solution to our productivity problem, without innovation”.

A trial of medical drones to deliver blood samples in London could be derailed by a single noise complaint, and this is the kind of red tape that will be peeled away so technologies can be brought to market quickly, he said.

It comes as former Conservative minister Lord David Willetts was confirmed as the first head of the new Regulatory Innovation Office (RIO), a role in which he will be tasked with shaping regulatory approaches for new technologies.

To deliver our Plan for Change we have to shift the balance of power, away from stagnation and old ideas, towards innovation and opportunity, and the bold people building a new future for Britain.

Peter Kyle

The Technology Secretary told the techUK conference: “Everywhere you see, there is an imbalance of power in this country which has – for too long – made it impossible to imagine a better future for Britain.

“To deliver our Plan for Change we have to shift the balance of power, away from stagnation and old ideas, towards innovation and opportunity, and the bold people building a new future for Britain.

“In doing so, by 2035 we could see a whole new Britain emerge, harnessing the power of technological development, from engineering biology to AI, semiconductors and cyber security, or quantum and future telecoms for a stronger economy and better lives for all in the UK.”

Mr Kyle also announced the 10 winners of Innovate UK’s Quantum Missions Pilot, who will receive £12 million between them to help develop quantum computing and networking technologies.

The RIO was launched in October and is intended to reduce the burdens for businesses looking to bring new products and services to the market.

Lord Willetts said he is “honoured” to take on the role and hailed the “exciting opportunity to shape regulatory approaches that empower new technologies”.

Lord Willetts brings the expertise and leadership experience that will be key to streamlining innovation

Peter Kyle

Among the technologies the body could help make available are delivery drones for medicines and AI training software for surgeons, officials at the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology said.

Drones could also be looked at in relation to other industries such as faster delivery of packages or groceries.

Lord Willetts served as the MP for Havant from 1992 to 2015, and was paymaster general for a time under Sir John Major, before returning to the government as universities and science minister in Lord David Cameron’s administration.

Mr Kyle said Lord Willetts’ experience “will be key to streamlining innovation and unapologetically unleash the innovation that we know can improve lives”.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

X logo

Data watchdog to investigate X’s Grok AI tool

Doctor using AI algorithm and machine learning to detect pneumonia

AI could lead to patient harm, researchers suggest

Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla and senior advisor to the president of the United States, has frozen Tesla sales in China.

Elon Musk freezes Tesla orders to China as Trump's trade war continues

Nearly a quarter of children spend more than four hours a day on an internet-enabled device, a survey for the Children’s Commissioner has suggested.

Nearly quarter of children spend more than four hours a day on devices

A laptop user with their hood up

Four in 10 UK businesses hit by cyber attack or breach in the last year

The remote-controlled mine plough system Weevil being put through its paces

Minefield-clearing robot to be trialled for British Army front lines

Elon Musk 'rage quits' favourite video game after being ‘cyber-bullied’ by players

Elon Musk 'rage quits' favourite video game after being ‘cyber-bullied’ by players

Exclusive
A video game which touts itself as an "incest and non-consensual sex" simulator has been banned in the UK

Home Secretary hails victory for LBC after vile rape and incest game pulled from download in UK

Young girl playing on an apple iPad tablet computer

Nearly quarter of children spend more than four hours per day on internet device, survey finds

School mobile phone bans

Nearly quarter of children spend more than four hours a day on devices – poll

School attendance

Government should ban phones in schools to alleviate pressures – union leader

Exclusive
The computer game "No Mercy" centres around a male protagonist who is encouraged to "become every woman's worst nightmare", and "never take no for an answer."

Video game encouraging rape and incest removed from major gaming platform in the UK after LBC investigation

Gerry Adams

Gerry Adams seeking legal advice over Meta use of books for AI systems

Exclusive
The computer game "No Mercy" centres around a male protagonist who is encouraged to "become every woman's worst nightmare", and  "never take no for an answer."

Australia and Canada pull rape and incest game that tells players to be 'women's worst nightmare'

The iPhone 16 on display

Will the Trump tariffs cause gadget prices to rise?

A laptop user with their hood up

Suicide forum investigated under new online safety laws