Contracts for Innovation: DSbD Advancing CHERI Tools and software
Organisations can apply for a share of up to £12 million, inclusive of VAT, to work on maturing and enabling the availability of CHERI Tools and Software components for RISC-V embedded devices that implement the CHERI architecture extensions.
- Opening date:
- Closing date:
Contents
Summary
Description
This is a Contracts for Innovation competition funded by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology.
The aim of the competition is to fund activities in maturing and enabling the availability of CHERI (Capability Hardware Enhanced RISC Instructions) tools and software components for RISC-V embedded devices that implement the CHERI architecture extensions.
This is a single phase, two stage competition.
The decision to proceed with stage 2 will depend on the successful delivery against contracted milestones by the end of stage 1 and budget availability for stage 2.
In applying to this competition you are entering into a competitive process. This competition has a funding budget of up to £4 million for stage 1 and up to £8 million for stage 2, so we may not be able to fund all the proposed projects.
It may be the case that your project scores highly and receives positive comments from the assessors but we are still unable to fund it due to the portfolio approach taken.
Any adoption and implementation of a solution from this competition would be subject to a separate, possibly competitive, procurement exercise. This competition does not cover the purchase of any solution.
This competition closes at 11am UK time on the deadline stated in this Innovate UK competition brief. We cannot guarantee other government or third-party sites will always show the correct competition information.
Project size
Projects can range in total eligible costs from £200,000 to £3 million, inclusive of VAT. Stage 1 must include contract agreed milestones and associated deliverables between £200,000 and £1 million. Projects may end after stage 1 with no stage 2 proposed.
Accessibility and Inclusion
We welcome and encourage applications from people of all backgrounds and are committed to making our application process accessible to everyone. This includes making reasonable adjustments, for people who have a disability or a long-term condition and face barriers applying to us.
You can contact us at any time to ask for guidance.
We recommend you contact us at least 15 working days before this competition’s closing date to allow us to put the most suitable support in place. The support we can provide may be limited if you contact us close to the competition deadline.
You can contact Innovate UK by email or call 0300 321 4357. Our phone lines are open from 9am to 12pm and 2pm to 5pm UK time, Monday to Friday (excluding bank holidays).
Eligibility
Who can apply
Your project
Projects must:
start by 1 September 2025
end by 31 March 2028
last between 6 and 31 months
have total costs between £200,000 and £1 million, inclusive of VAT, for stage 1
have total costs up to £2 million, inclusive of VAT, for stage 2
Stage 1 must complete by 31 March 2026. No time extensions for stage 1 milestones will be possible. All stage 2 milestones must be completed prior to 31 March 2028.
You must provide defined and measurable milestones including associated deliverables which must be clearly broken down with associated claims against stage 1 and stage 2 respectively.
Projects must always start on the first of the month, even if this is a non-working day. You must not start your project until your Contract has been approved by Innovate UK.
You must only include eligible project costs in your application. See our overview of eligible project costs. For specific guidance, see the eligibility section in this competition.
Break Clause
The funding for the continuation of the Advancing CHERI Tools and Software projects is subject to a review by March 2026.
In the event that the decision is made to terminate the funding as a result of this review, there will be a three month notice period before the funding will stop. Innovate UK will not be able to fund any further project activity after the end of the notice period, and projects will stop at the end of stage 1 on 31 March 2026.
Projects who have not met their stage 1 milestones will be given a 30 day notice period before the funding for their project will stop. Innovate UK will not be able to fund further project activity after the end of the notice period, and projects who have not met their stage 1 milestones will stop on 31 March 2026.
Subject to meeting all stage 1 milestones, and funding being confirmed beyond March 2026, projects will continue into stage 2 delivery.
Although the risk of termination is expected to be low, it is crucial that applicants demonstrate they have considered this in their project plan. Projects should be designed in a way that ensures tangible and viable deliverables could be delivered by March 2026 should the funding be terminated.
Applicant
To lead a project you can:
be an organisation of any size
work alone or with the subcontracted skills and expertise of others from business, research organisations, research and technology organisations, or the third sector (charities, social enterprises and voluntary groups)
Applicant organisations must:
have the knowledge and experience working with CHERI to undertake the proposed project
have available platforms or environments to support the proposed project
A CHERI-enabled device is a system on chip silicon implementation that utilises the RISC-V architecture that implements the CHERI extensions as defined in the RISC-V Specification for CHERI Extensions.
Contracts will be awarded to a single legal entity only. The majority of the project work and key deliverables must be completed by the applicant and be carried out in the UK. Subcontractors can be used, but only for specialist skills.
An individual may be named in only one application submitted to this competition.
A single organisation may submit multiple applications in this competition.
Sanctions
This competition will not fund you, or provide any financial benefit to any individual or entities directly or indirectly involved with you, which would expose Innovate UK or any direct or indirect beneficiary of funding from Innovate UK to UK Sanctions. For example, through any procurement, commercial, business development or supply chain activity with any entity as lead, partner or subcontractor related to these countries, administrations and terrorist groups.
Use of animals in research and innovation
Innovate UK expects and supports the provision and safeguarding of welfare standards for animals used in research and innovation, according to best practice and up to date guidance.
Applicants must ensure that all of the proposed work within projects, both that in the UK and internationally, will comply with the UKRI guidance on the use of animals in research and innovation.
Any projects selected for funding which involve animals will be asked to provide additional information on welfare and ethical considerations, as well as compliance with any relevant legislation as part of the project start-up process. This information will be reviewed before an award is made.
Funding
A total of up to £12 million, inclusive of VAT, is allocated to this competition across two stages. The funding budget is up to £4 million for stage 1 and up £8 million for stage 2.
Contracts will be awarded to projects with total eligible costs between £200,000 and £1 million, inclusive of VAT, for stage 1 and up to £2 million inclusive of VAT, for stage 2. Each project will last between 6 and 31 months.
The total funding available for the competition can change. The funders have the right to:
adjust the provisional funding allocations between stage 1 and stage 2
apply a ‘portfolio’ approach
Value Added Tax (VAT)
You must select whether you are VAT registered before entering your eligible project costs.
VAT is the responsibility of the invoicing business. We will not provide any further advice and suggest you seek independent advice from HMRC.
VAT registered
If you select you are VAT registered, you must enter your eligible project costs exclusive of VAT. As part of the application process VAT will be automatically calculated and added to your project cost total. Your total eligible project costs inclusive of VAT must not exceed £3 million.
Not VAT registered
If you select you are not VAT registered, you must enter your eligible project costs exclusive of VAT and no VAT will be added. You will not be able to increase total project costs to cover VAT later should you become VAT registered. Your total project costs must not exceed £3 million.
Research and development (R&D)
Your application must have at least 50% of the contract value attributed directly and exclusively to R&D services, including solution exploration and design. R&D can also include prototyping and field-testing the product or service. This lets you incorporate the results of your exploration and design and demonstrate that you can produce in quantity to acceptable quality standards.
The R&D component of the project cannot include:
quantity production and similar commercial development
supply to establish commercial viability or to recover R&D costs
integration, customisation or incremental adaptations and improvements to existing products or processes
Innovate UK may revoke its decision to proceed to funding without notice if government commitment for this initiative is withdrawn.
Subsidy control
Contracts for Innovation competitions involve procurement of R&D services at a fair market value and are not subject to subsidy control criteria that typically apply to grant funding.
Objectives
Your project
The aim of the competition is to fund activities in maturing and enabling the availability of CHERI (Capability Hardware Enhanced RISC Instructions) tools and software components for RISC-V embedded devices that implement the CHERI architecture extensions.
The competition is supporting economic growth and societal resilience through accelerating the adoption and diffusion of the secure by design CHERI technology. The focus is on maturing and increasing the availability of the required tooling and software components for CHERI-enabled devices.
We require projects to mature and make available tools and software components for use with CHERI-enabled devices. This could include porting and optimisation activities on:
the Linux kernel and associated frameworks such as memory management, file system, network and inter-process communication
application services frameworks and software components libraries used in embedded systems, such as various protocols and communications, storage and databases, identity and cryptography
Real-Time Operating Systems (RTOS) and runtimes used within embedded systems such as FreeRTOS, Zephyr OS, Java, Docker, WebAssembly
tools used by developers of software such as compilers, debuggers, profilers and core libraries
The Centre for CHERI Tools and Software
For the successful commercial adoption of CHERI enabled products and services it is necessary to have matured tools, software components and associated dependencies available in a consistent and accessible form.
A Centre for CHERI Tools and Software (referred to as 'the Centre' from here on) is separately being created to be a collaborative engineering organisation that will consolidate and make available CHERI-based software and tools for RISC-V embedded devices.
Your project must involve the development, maturation and subsequent availability of CHERI Tools and Software components specifically for CHERI-enabled, RISC-V embedded devices. Your project should contribute towards building the Centre’s accessible, open-source ecosystem in order to build consistent and supportable CHERI-enabled software stacks, with a focus on embedded markets. Projects should justify applicability to usage in Critical National Infrastructure (CNI).
Projects must identify either a single or associated grouping of tools or software components that will be developed and matured through defined activities that will result in defined milestones and associated deliverables to a state suitable for distribution through the Centre’s infrastructures.
Projects working on open-source software component or tool outcomes should deliver using Open Source Security Foundation (OSSF) best practices to align with the Centre’s dissemination activities
For projects delivering commercial outcomes**,** submissions must describe a credible and practical route to market to commercialise those outcomes.
Portfolio approach
Contracts will be awarded to successful applicants for a variety of projects across different scope areas, activities, technologies, requirements and eligible project costs. We call this a portfolio approach.
Research categories
Prototype development and evaluation
This can include prototyping, demonstrating, piloting, testing and validation of new or improved products, processes or services in environments representative of real-life operating conditions. The primary objective is to make further technical improvements on products, processes or services that are not substantially set.
Projects we will not fund
We will not fund projects that:
are not original in scope and duplicate someone else’s work
develop tools or software components that would not otherwise be used by software developers
develop tools or software components that cannot be used in the development of CHERI-enabled, RISC-V, embedded solutions and would not be applicable to enabling CNI use cases
develop software that would be agnostic or minimally affected by the adoption of the CHERI technology
Dates
20 May 2025
Online briefing event: register to attend
(Briefing slides will be available to download from supporting information after the event)
28 July 2025
Interviews start
1 August 2025
Interviews end
5 August 2025
Applicants notified
5 August 2025
Feedback
1 September 2025
Contracts awarded
1 September 2025
Project start from
How to apply
Before you start
By submitting an application, you agree to the terms of the draft contract which is available once you start your application. The terms of the contract are non-negotiable and are included in the draft contract. We reserve the right to change the terms and conditions if necessary.
The final contract will include any milestones and associated deliverables you have agreed with the funding authority and will be sent to you if your application is successful. The contract is binding once it is returned by you and signed by both parties.
When you start an application, you will be prompted to create an account as the lead applicant or sign in as a representative of your organisation. Using your account, you will be able to track your applications progress.
As the applicant you are responsible for:
collecting the information for your application
representing your organisation in leading the project if your application is successful
You will be able to invite colleagues from your organisation to contribute to the application.
What happens next
A selected panel of independent assessors will review and score all eligible and within scope applications.
You may be invited to attend an interview, based on the score from the written assessment, funding requested and fit against a portfolio approach (scope areas, activities, technologies, requirements and eligible project costs), where you must give a presentation. Your interview will take place either online or at a designated location. The date and time of your interview will be included in your invitation.
Project selection will be based on the score achieved from the written assessment, interview and fit against a portfolio approach.
What we will ask you
The application is split into four sections:
Project details.
Application questions.
Finances.
Project Impact.
You must read the guidance on applying for a competition on the Innovation Funding Service before you start.
Before submitting, it is the lead applicant’s responsibility to make sure:
that all the information provided in the application is correct
your proposal meets the eligibility and scope criteria
all sections of the application are marked as complete
You can reopen your application once submitted, up until the competition deadline. You must resubmit the application before the competition deadline.
Accessibility and Inclusion
We welcome and encourage applications from people of all backgrounds and are committed to making our application process accessible to everyone. This includes making reasonable adjustments, for people who have a disability or a long-term condition and face barriers applying to us.
You can contact us at any time to ask for guidance.
We recommend you contact us at least 15 working days before this competition’s closing date to allow us to put the most suitable support in place. The support we can provide may be limited if you contact us close to the competition deadline.
You can contact Innovate UK by email or call 0300 321 4357. Our phone lines are open from 9am to 12pm and 2pm to 5pm UK time, Monday to Friday (excluding bank holidays).
Project details
This section provides background for your application and is not scored.
Application details
Give your project’s title, start date and duration.
Who made you aware of the competition?
Select a category to state who made you aware of the competition. You cannot choose more than one.
How long has your organisation been established for?
Select a category to state how long has your organisation been established for. You cannot choose more than one.
What is your organisation’s primary focus area?
Select a category to state your organisation’s primary focus area. You cannot choose more than one.
Project and scope summary
Please provide a short summary of your project that describes:
your knowledge and experience of working with CHERI and target platforms or environments you will be using
how the tools or software components will be used by software developers in the development of CHERI-enabled, RISC-V, embedded solutions
how the tools or software components will be applicable to CNI use cases
Your answer for this section can be up to 600 words long.
This section is not scored, but we will use it to decide whether the project fits the scope of the competition. If it does not, it will be rejected.
Public description
Provide a brief description of your project. If your application is successful, we will publish this description. This can happen before you start your project. This question is mandatory, but we will not assess this content as part of your application.
Describe your project in a way that you are happy to see published. Do not include any commercially sensitive information. We have the right to amend the description before publication if necessary but will consult you about any changes.
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
Applicant location
You must state the name of your organisation along with your full registered address.
You must also state the name and full registered address of any potential or confirmed subcontractors.
We are collecting this information to understand more about the geographical location of all participants of a project.
Your answer can be up to 200 words long.
2. Application questions
The assessors will score all of your questions except questions 1 to 5 which are not scored. You will receive feedback for each scored question. Find out more about how our assessors assess and how we select applications for funding.
Do not include any URLs in your answers.
Question 1. Animal testing (not scored)
Will your project involve any trials with animals or animal testing?
You must select one option:
Yes
No
We will only support innovation projects conducted to the highest standards of animal welfare.
Further information for proposals involving animal testing is available at the UKRI Good Research Hub and NC3R’s animal welfare guidance.
Question 2. Permits and licences (not scored)
Will you have the correct permits and licences in place to carry out your project?
We are unable to fund projects which do not have the correct permits or licences in place by your project start date.
You must select one option:
Yes
No
In process of being applied for
Not applicable
Question 3: Break clause (not scored)
Have you acknowledged the break clause in your project plan and made necessary plans to mitigate this risk?
Yes
No
Break clause: The funding for the continuation of the Advancing CHERI Tools and Software projects is subject to a review by March 2026.
In the event that the decision is made to terminate the funding as a result of this review, there will be a three month notice period before the funding will stop. Innovate UK will not be able to fund any further project activity after the end of the notice period, and projects will stop at the end of stage 1 on 31 March 2026.
Projects who have not met their stage 1 milestones will be given a 30 day notice period before the funding for their project will stop. Innovate UK will not be able to fund further project activity after the end of the notice period, and projects who have not met their stage 1 milestones will stop on 31 March 2026.
Subject to meeting all stage 1 milestones, and funding being confirmed beyond March 2026, projects will continue into stage 2 delivery.
Although the risk of termination is expected to be low, it is crucial that applicants demonstrate they have considered this in their project plan. Projects should be designed in a way that ensures tangible and viable deliverables could be delivered by March 2026 should the funding be terminated.
Question 4. International collaboration (not scored)
Does your proposed work involve any international collaboration or engagement?
You must provide details of any expected international collaboration or engagement. You must include a list of the names and the countries, any international project co-leads, project partners, visiting researchers, or other collaborators are based in. You must also include details of any subcontractors or service providers.
If your proposed work does not involve international collaboration or engagement, your answer must confirm this.
Question 5. Trusted Research and Innovation (not scored)
You must explain if your proposed project work relates to UKRI’s Trusted Research and Innovation (TR&I) Principles, including:
a list of any dual-use (both military and non-military) applications to your research
a list of the areas where your project is relevant to one or more of the 17 areas of the UK National Security and Investment (NSI) Act
whether an export control license is required for this project under the academic export control guidance and the status of any applications
a list of any items or substances on the UK Strategic Export Control List
If your proposed work does not relate to UKRI’s TR&I Principles, your answer must confirm this.
We may ask you to provide additional TR&I information at a later date, in line with UKRI TR&I Principles and funding terms and conditions.
Question 6. Motivation and alignment
Provide a motivation for working on the tool or software component and how it aligns with the competition’s objective and scope.
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
This question will be scored against this assessment criterion: Is the motivation credible and does the project align to the objectives of the competition?
Question 7. Technical undertaking
What are the technical challenges limiting the availability of the proposed tools or software components for CHERI-enabled devices?
Describe clearly the proposed activities highlighting CHERI-specific activities, such as whether you are targeting CHERI ‘hybrid’ or ‘pure-cap’ compilation, and the level and granularity of any compartmentalisation.
Explain:
how you will address the proposed activities
which of these activities are classed R&D or not
what are the milestones and associated deliverables, and how will these be made available
Your answer can be up to 800 words long.
This question will be scored against this assessment criterion: Will the proposed activities address these technical challenges and result in suitable milestones, associated deliverables and maximise the benefit through adopting CHERI?
Question 8. Intellectual property (IP)
Describe your approach to IP in the context of this project.
You must include:
your freedom to operate, particularly in commercial activities
any background IP which will be utilised in the project deliverables or constrain the subsequent use of those deliverables
how you will manage and protect any IP generated as part of this project
Your answer can be up to 300 words long.
This question will be scored against these assessment criteria: Is the background IP adequately described? Is it clear that the project has freedom to operate?
Question 9. Project plan and methodology
Describe your project plan and identify the main milestones with clear separation between stage 1 (ending by 31 March 2026) and stage 2.
Provide evidence that the proposed activities are feasible and that your described methodology will successfully deliver the defined outcomes.
You must:
describe which milestones will be met in stage 1 and which in stage 2
identify the milestones against which timely delivery can be assessed
identify the mechanisms by which you will deliver your outcomes
identify activities undertaken by subcontractors
include a risk register, including likelihood and impact, with proposed mitigations
You must upload a project plan or Gantt chart as an appendix in PDF format. It must be a PDF no larger than 10MB. It must be a single A4 page and legible at 100% zoom.
Your milestones must:
be clear
be defined using SMART (specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and time-bound) criteria
be associated with the appropriate deliverables and payments
indicate your payment schedule by month
Your answer can be up to 1000 words long.
This question will be assessed against these assessment criteria:
does the proposal show a clear plan for establishing the technical feasibility for the proposed activities
is the risk register credible
are the stage 1 and stage 2 milestones and associated deliverables appropriately defined and scheduled
do the deliverables provide confidence in achieving the milestones
is the requested payment appropriate to the value of the milestones
is the use of subcontractors appropriate
Note: information from the finances section will be used to support the assessment of this question. Proposed milestones and associated deliverables and payments stated in this section must match those entered in the finance summary on your application.
Question 10. Technical team and expertise
Provide a description of your technical team and any subcontractors.
Describe:
how your organisation has the necessary skills, capabilities, and experience to deliver the intended milestones
who is in the technical team and what is the relevant experience they have
what skill does the subcontractor(s) bring to the project
Your answer can be up to 600 words long.
This question will be scored against this assessment criterion: Does the team have the skills, capabilities and experience to deliver the project?
Question 11. Costs and value for money
How does the cost claimed for each milestone represent value for money for the taxpayer in delivering the objectives of the competition?
Describe:
the total costs of each milestone, both in stage 1 and stage 2, inclusive of VAT (if applicable), you are requesting
how each deliverable represents value for money
Proposed costs stated in this section must clearly list stage 1 and stage 2 in a table and match those entered in the finance summary.
All costs quoted must reflect actual costs at a fair market value for the activities undertaken and not include profit.
Progression to stage 2 depends on successful delivery against milestones in stage 1 and confirmed budget availability for stage 2 as defined by the break clause.
Note that all payments are made on submission of an invoice. The invoice must be submitted within 30 days following the acceptance of completed milestones.
Your answer can be up to 600 words long.
Full Economic Cost (FEC) calculations are not relevant for Contracts for Innovation competitions. Contracts for Innovation is a competitive process and applications will come from a variety of organisations. Whatever calculation you use to arrive at your total eligible project costs your application will be assessed against applications from other organisations. Bear this in mind when calculating your total eligible project costs. You can include overheads but remember that this is a competitive process.
The assessors are required to judge the application finances in terms of value for money. They will score your finances against this assessment criterion: Are the milestones clearly and appropriately defined? Are the costs of milestones appropriate and do they represent value for money?
Note: information from the finances section will be used to support the assessment of this question.
Question 12. Commercial and exploitation potential
How will your project enable the delivery of commercial products that will use CHERI-enabled devices? How will the project contribute to the broader availability and accessibility of CHERI technology?
Explain:
if your proposed outputs will become a commercially available product, and describe your expected route to market and associated timeline
if your proposed outputs are open-source how will the related outcomes be up-streamed to its mainline stream or be integrated with the Centre’s delivery mechanisms
Describe:
the level by which the security, integrity and resilience of the proposed deliveries are enhanced
any existing commercial relationships relevant to the project
Your answer can be up to 600 words long.
This question will be scored against these assessment criteria:
will the proposed outputs unlock the delivery of commercial products and benefit the broader CHERI ecosystem
is there a pathway to make the proposed outputs available to product developers
will the proposed outputs increase the security, integrity and resilience of software on CHERI-enabled devices
how significant is the competitive advantage of this technology over the non CHERI-enabled existing solutions
3. Finances
Enter your project costs, organisation details and funding details.
You must select whether you are VAT registered before entering your eligible project costs. We advise you answer the VAT registered question first before entering your eligible costs. Your total eligible project costs must not exceed £3 million.
If you select you are VAT registered, you must enter your eligible project costs exclusive of VAT. As part of the application process VAT will be automatically calculated and added to your eligible project cost total.
If you select you are not VAT registered, you must enter your eligible project costs exclusive of VAT and no VAT will be added. You will not be able to increase total project costs to cover VAT later should you become VAT registered.
VAT is the responsibility of the invoicing business. We will not provide any further advice and advise you to seek independent advice from HMRC.
Full Economic Cost (FEC) calculations are not relevant for Contracts for Innovation competitions. Contracts for Innovation is a competitive process and applications will come from a variety of organisations.
Whatever calculation you use to arrive at your total eligible project costs your application will be assessed against applications from other organisations. Bear this in mind when calculating your total eligible project costs. You can include overheads but remember that this is a competitive process.
For an overview on what costs you can claim, see our project costs guidance. Note: this is general guidance, for specific guidance please see the eligibility section in this competition. You can also view our application finances video.
4. Project Impact
This section is not scored but will provide background to your project.
You must complete the Project Impact questions before being able to submit the application.
More information can be found in our Project Impact guidance and by viewing our Impact Management Framework video.
Innovate UK complies with the requirements of UK GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018, and is committed to upholding data protection legislation, and protecting your information in accordance with data protection principles.
Assessment
Your application will be reviewed by three independent assessors who will individually score your application and the awarded scores will be averaged for your overall score to prioritise portfolio selection.
You can find out more about our assessment process in the General Guidance.
Your submitted application will be assessed against these criteria:
DSbD Advancing CHERI Tools and Software - Assessor guidance for applicants.pdf
Interviews
If your application passes the first stage of assessment, is over £1 million in costs and fits against a portfolio approach (scope areas, activities, technologies, requirements and eligible project costs), you will be invited to attend an interview, where you must give a presentation. Your interview will take place in person either at Caxton House in London or Polaris House in Swindon, with remote participation by exception. The interviews will be held between 28 July and 1 August 2025.
If you require any reasonable adjustments to support you at the interview you must email us at support@iuk.ukri.org within three days of receiving your invitation.
Before the interview and by the deadline stated in the invitation email, you:
must send a list of who will attend the interview
must send your interview presentation slides
List of attendees
Up to four people from your organisation can attend. They must all be available on all published interview dates. We are unable to reschedule slots once allocated.
Presentation slides
For projects £1 to £2 million in costs, your interview presentation must:
use Microsoft PowerPoint
be no longer than 20 minutes
have no more than 15 slides
not include any video or embedded web links
For projects £2 to £3 million in costs, your interview presentation must:
use Microsoft PowerPoint
be no longer than 30 minutes
have no more than 15 slides
not include any video or embedded web links
You cannot change the presentation after you submit it or bring any additional materials to the interview.
Interview
Projects £1 to £2 million:
After your presentation the panel will spend 30 minutes asking questions. You will be expected to answer based on the information you provided in your application form, presentation and the response to feedback.
Projects £2 to £3 million:
After your presentation the panel will spend 45 minutes asking questions. You will be expected to answer based on the information you provided in your application form, presentation and the response to feedback.
After your interview
The panellists will individually score your application and these will be averaged for your overall interview score. This score will supersede the one you received from initial assessment. We will notify you whether you have been successful or not by email and you will receive feedback on your interview within a week of notification.
Supporting information
Background and further information
About Contracts for Innovation competitions
Contracts for Innovation provides innovative solutions to challenges faced by the public sector. This can lead to better public services and improved efficiency and effectiveness.
The Contracts for Innovation programme:
supports economic growth and enables the development of innovative products and services through the public procurement of R&D
generates new business opportunities for companies
provides a route to market for new ideas
creates opportunities to work directly with the public sector
Contracts for Innovation competitions are open to all eligible organisations that can demonstrate a route to market for their solution. Developments are 100% funded and focused on specific identified needs, increasing the chance of exploitation.
Contracts for Innovation encourages the creation and protection of new intellectual property (IP). Applicants retain all the rights to both foreground and background IP but will be expected to grant certain royalty-free licences to the funder for use of the foreground IP.
Contracts for Innovation is a procurement of R&D services. If successful, you will receive a contract to deliver the proposed activity. Costs quoted must reflect actual costs at a fair market value and not include profit.
You must submit an invoice for the work undertaken. All payments are made in arrears on submission of an invoice. Invoices must be submitted within 30 days of the end of each monitoring period for all completed milestones.
If you are VAT registered, your total costs are expected to include VAT that you would charge as a service provider. VAT is the responsibility of the invoicing business and applicants should ensure that VAT has been calculated correctly as part of their application. You will need to confirm your VAT status as part of the application process
Note: we are seeing a rise in double counting of VAT during the application process, making some applicants ineligible. To avoid this, it is important you input your costs minus VAT. VAT is added on by us in the Innovation Funding Service (IFS).
Suppliers for each project will be selected by an open competition process and retain the intellectual property generated from the project, with certain rights of use retained by the contracting authority. This is an excellent opportunity to establish an early customer for a new technology and to fund its development.
Broader Information
The Digital Security by Design (DSbD) programme (2019 to 2025) delivered by UKRI has proven the technical viability of CHERI technology at scale in deterministically mitigating critical memory safety vulnerabilities, thereby unlocking future pathways towards adopting secured by design computing foundations.
The UK Government has been strongly supporting the adoption and diffusion of CHERI, fostering collaboration through industry bodies such as the CHERI Alliance, and accelerating the commercial implementation and development of CHERI-enabled devices and associated tools and software components to drive economic growth, enhance national security and increase societal resilience.
Briefing recording and slides
Briefing recording and slides will be available to download here after the briefing event.
Setting up your project
You will be notified by email on the date published for this competition. Notifications may be sent any time up to 5pm.
You must follow the unique link embedded in your email notification. This takes you to your Innovation Funding Service (IFS) Set Up portal, where we gather the information to set up your project.
You will have 30 days (including weekends and bank holidays) to complete all of your project set up. Within this time, you will also be required to submit:
project location
any answers to financial or milestone queries we have requested
any requested documentation to support your project
Your funding offer may be withdrawn if project setup is not completed within this or an alternative timeframe as advised by Innovate UK.
In order for us to process your invoices, you must make sure you have a valid UK business bank account. It can take several weeks for a new account to be created if required. We recommend starting this process as early as possible to avoid any delays to your project start date.
The bank account which milestone payments are to be paid into must:
be a business account in the same name as the organisation listed in IFS
be from a UK bank regulated by the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA)
have a cheque and credit clearing facility
Online accounts are eligible as long as they meet the above criteria.
Your Contract
Once you have successfully completed project setup, we will issue your contract. The contract will be made available on your IFS portal. You will need to sign and upload this for us to approve. Once approved we will send you an email with permission to start your project on your confirmed start date.
You must not start your project before the date stated on your email and contract. Any costs incurred before your agreed start date cannot be claimed as part of your project.
Your contract start date is provided in the dates and eligibility sections. This cannot be varied and all contracts must start on that date.
If your application is unsuccessful
We would like to remind you that eligible non-funded businesses can still benefit from fully funded and bespoke support from the Innovate UK Business Growth service.
Support for SMEs from Innovate UK Business Growth service
Innovate UK Business Growth helps innovation focused businesses make the best strategic choices and access the right resources, in order to grow and ultimately achieve scale.
Our innovation and growth specialists provide our fully funded and bespoke support to clients nationwide. Visit the service’s website to discover whether you could benefit from this advisory support, which is available to Innovate UK funded and non-funded businesses alike.
Protecting your innovation
A Secure Innovation campaign has been developed to help founders and leaders of innovative startups protect their technology, competitive advantage, and reputation.
This was developed by UK’s National Protective Security Authority (NPSA) and the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC).
Data sharing
This competition is jointly operated by Innovate UK, and the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) (each an ‘agency’).
Any relevant information submitted and produced during the application process concerning your application can be shared by one agency with the other, for its individual storage, processing and use.
Innovate UK may also share any relevant information submitted and produced during the application process concerning your application with Innovate UK’s regional UK third parties. For more information see how we handle grant applicant and grant holder data.
This means that any information given to or generated by Innovate UK in respect of your application may be passed on to DSIT and vice versa. This would include, but is not restricted to:
the information stated on the application, including the personal details of all applicants
scoring and feedback on the application
information received during the management and administration of the contract, such as Monitoring Service Provider reports
Innovate UK and DSIT are directly accountable to you for their holding and processing of your information, including any personal data and confidential information. Data is held in accordance with their own policies. Accordingly, Innovate UK, Innovate UK Business Connect and DSIT will be data controllers for personal data submitted during the application.
Innovate UK’s Privacy PolicyInnovate UK Business Connect Privacy PolicyDSIT’s Privacy Policy
Innovate UK complies with the requirements of UK GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018, and is committed to upholding data protection legislation, and protecting your information in accordance with data protection principles.
The Information Commissioner’s Office also has a useful guide for organisations, which outlines the data protection principles.
Further help and guidance
If you want help to find an organisation to work with, contact the Innovate UK Business Connect.
If you need more information about how to apply or you want to submit your application in Welsh, email support@iuk.ukri.org or call 0300 321 4357.
Our phone lines are open from 9am to 12pm and 2pm to 5pm UK time, Monday to Friday (excluding bank holidays).
Innovate UK or any of our partners will not tolerate abusive language in any written or verbal correspondence, applications, social media or any other form that might affect staff.