logo
Frank Strang obituary

Frank Strang obituary

The Guardian6 hours ago
The serial entrepreneur Frank Strang, who has died aged 67 of oesophageal cancer, seized an unpremeditated opportunity to deliver the first licensed spaceport for vertical launches in western Europe, overcoming multiple barriers along the way.
Having acquired a disused RAF radar station at the most northerly point in the Shetland Islands a decade earlier – without any thought of spaceports – by 2017 Strang had realised the potential of his asset as the government sought to promote a UK launch capacity.
Long-haired and cowboy-booted, Strang weaved his way through the corridors of power to persuade government, regulators and private investors that the answer lay in the former Saxa Vord base on the island of Unst. Step by step, he and his small team overcame safety, planning and political challenges while walking a financial tightrope to keep the vision alive.
One of the more unlikely delays came from Historic Environment Scotland on grounds that the launch site would mean demolition of a former radar station that had been designated 'a monument of national significance'. The quango eventually withdrew its objection, recognising the spaceport's national importance.
SaxaVord Spaceport was licensed in 2023 by the Civil Aviation Authority and the first launch is due within the coming months, with international clients from both civil and military sectors signed up.
It is poignant that Strang will not be around to witness the climax to his endeavours; his cancer diagnosis came just two months before his death.
The Saxa Vord RAF base had closed in 2006 and was bought shortly afterwards by Frank and his then wife, Debbie. The site included 23 houses and became an eco-tourism centre with accommodation, restaurant and bar. They diversified into a facilities company, providing up to 2,000 oil workers at the Sullom Voe terminal on the Shetland mainland with accommodation and catering, and founded the UK's most northerly gin distillery, on Unst, in 2014.
The lightbulb moment came when the UK government commissioned the Sceptre report to advise on potential for establishing a vertical launch site in the north of Scotland. It concluded that 'the Shetland Isles has the best orbital access, but the remote site means it is logistically the most challenging'.
The Strangs, along with a former RAF fighter pilot, Scott Hammond, in 2017 founded Shetland Space Centre (of which I later became a director); it was renamed SaxaVord Spaceport in 2021. The challenges, as well as the remote location, also included the fact that the Scottish government put its weight and money behind a virgin site on the Sutherland mainland, close to land owned by Anders Holch Povlsen, a Danish businessman who has extensive interests in the north of Scotland.
Povlsen's well-founded environmental objections to the Sutherland option developed into wholehearted enthusiasm for SaxaVord and, as the need for investment grew to fund its construction, his sustained support and faith in Strang's ability to deliver kept the show on the road.
'Against the odds,' said Povlsen, 'and with many headwinds, even a few unfair ones, he built the solid foundations of what will likely become Europe's largest commercial spaceport. No matter what happens, many people, including me, are going to stay right behind Frank, doing our utmost to make sure SaxaVord becomes the success it's set up for.'
Hammond, who has succeeded Frank as chief executive, said: 'We are determined to make the UK Europe's leader in vertical launch spaceflight. That will be Frank's legacy for Shetland, for Scotland and the UK.'
Frank was born and spent his early years in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, where his father, Tom, was a physical education teacher. His mother, Barbara, also a teacher, died when he was 13. The family had its roots in the Highlands, and Frank completed his schooling at Dingwall academy, Ross-shire. He then graduated in PE from Jordanhill College of Education, Glasgow.
After a spell teaching, he was accepted for training at the RAF College Cranwell, and joined the service as a physical education officer latterly based at Lossiemouth, in Moray, where he met Debbie Hope, a fellow RAF officer; they married in 1991. Part of Frank's role lay in community relations, and in 1994, the year of his departure from the RAF, he was appointed MBE for charitable fundraising. He was also coach to the Scottish freestyle ski team for five years.
He left the service after suffering an injury in a parachuting accident. His first business venture was to promote the US region of New England as a winter sports destination for UK skiers.
This took Frank into a project to redevelop a former military airport near Boston, which opened his eyes to similar possibilities in the UK, as the Ministry of Defence disposed of property assets. These were pursued with mixed results but his most fateful decision proved to be the purchase of Saxa Vord.
The Shetland Islands council chief executive Maggie Sandison, who was involved from the outset, noted that the project was conceived and constructed with the community in mind: 'Frank's commitment to a spaceport education strategy created opportunities for children and young people to engage with astronauts, attend space camps and participate in national space competitions.'
Frank and Debbie, who is deputy chief executive of Shetland Space Centre, separated two years ago.
Recently, he married Dani Morey. She survives him, along with Tom and Emily, the children of his first marriage.
Frank Strang, entrepreneur, born 3 August 1958; died 13 August 2025
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

JOHN MACLEOD: What this Clydeside giant could teach the political pipsqueaks of today
JOHN MACLEOD: What this Clydeside giant could teach the political pipsqueaks of today

Daily Mail​

time20 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

JOHN MACLEOD: What this Clydeside giant could teach the political pipsqueaks of today

It's a Glasgow shipyard: July 30, 1971. It's muggy, with men everywhere – thousands huddling in around the platform, hanging on Jimmy Reid's every word. Still not 40, assured, fluent, neatly suited and be-tied. Like an achingly cool teacher – and enjoying himself. 'We are not going to strike,' he carols. 'We are not even having a sit-in strike. Nobody and nothing will come in, and nothing will go out, without our permission. 'And there will be no hooliganism, there will be no vandalism, there will be no bevvying' – there is warm laughter – 'because the world is watching us, and it is our responsibility to conduct ourselves with responsibility, with dignity, and maturity.' Jimmy Reid's moment at the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders work-in is still one of Scotland's greatest hits. Up there with Jim Baxter running rings around England's World Cup-winning side. Archie Gemmill's goal in Argentina; Rikki Fulton's Supercop pulling up Taggart himself. The 'work-in' – occasioned because, in 1971, the Heath administration would not advance a £6million loan to keep the yards, with their full order books, ticking through a tight spot – was brilliantly framed. Not your usual strike, occupation or demo. But based on the blazing concept of the right to work, not merely the right not to be made redundant – not just the rights of one riveter, but those of an entire community. In an instant it captured the public's imagination. The likes of Matt McGinn and Billy Connolly rolled into Govan, Scotstoun and Yoker to entertain the lads. Donations poured in from the public. There was even a £5,000 cheque from John Lennon. Trounced in the court of public opinion, Heath blinked first. The government caved – and, thanks to Jimmy Airlie (the strategist) and Jimmy Reid (the rhetorician) two of the yards thrive to this day. Both men were stalwarts of the Communist Party. Indeed, Reid was a Clydebank councillor and, when he stood for Dunbartonshire Central in the February 1974 General Election, many thought he would be our first Communist MP since Willie Gallagher. It was an extraordinary era when, though Labour had many more members in Greater Glasgow, the Communists had far more activists. And – as the men of my late father's blue-collar Free Church congregation often told him (for the most part, wiry Lewismen) Communist shop stewards and officials served them far better than the Labour jobsworths. They listened. They cared. Indeed, they were weirdly Presbyterian. They spoke with the certitude of a preacher; their cadences – and Jimmy Reid, really, was our last great platform orator – echoed the Scottish Metrical Psalms and the King James Bible. Born in Govan in 1932, Reid's formal education ended at 14. He served briefly and unhappily in a stockbroker's office, found his metier as a shipbuilding engineer, joined the League of Labour Youth, and drifted rapidly to the Communist Party even as, bright and curious, he took avidly to lifelong learning. This was a world of dignity and structure that has all but gone. Boys did not just learn a trade; they learned to be men. There was constant discussion and debate, from which sparks flew and leaders emerged. A wider community – some 20,000 supply-chain jobs depended on those shipyards, as well as the 8,000 immediately employed – sat on the shoulders of strong women, family values, corner shops and churchgoing. And a planet away from the graffitied, heroin-addled drear to which much of West-Central Scotland is reduced today. That merry – if dignified – oration was not even Reid's greatest speech. In 1972, he was installed as Rector of Glasgow University. His address would win headlines all over the world and was even printed, verbatim, in the New York Times. 'From the very depth of my being,' Reid declared, 'I challenge the right of any man or any group of men, in business or in government, to tell a fellow human being that he or she is expendable…' His theme was alienation: a warning against blind pursuit of personal success, regardless of the consequences for others. 'Reject these attitudes. Reject the values and false morality that underlie these attitudes. A rat race is for rats. We're not rats. We're human beings. Reject the insidious pressures in society that would blunt your critical faculties to all that is happening around you, that would caution silence in the face of injustice lest you jeopardise your chances of promotion and self-advancement…' It was, someone said, the greatest speech since the Gettysburg Address. Yet only fragments of video and audio survive. This week, Reid's daughter Eileen, 66, has called for it all to be restaged and reinvented digitally, with the aid of artificial intelligence. For all Jimmy's ability, abundant charm and iron-clad integrity, he would never secure a national platform on which to stand. Time and again he lost elections for high union office. He slipped into the Labour Party, and stood against SNP incumbent Gordon Wilson at Dundee East in 1979. But terrified Tories in Broughty Ferry and so on voted tactically for Wilson, dreading anyone straight out of the Communist Party, and Reid was defeated. He would have the ear of Neil Kinnock, but could not win the trust of the wider Scottish Labour movement. He was thought too clever by half; too prone to unpredictable announcements, too thoughtful to be a knee-jerk supporter of every last, fashionable Left-wing cause. In 1984 he slammed the smuggest of union barons for the betrayal of his members: 'Arthur Scargill's leadership of the miners' strike has been a disgrace. The price to be paid for his folly will be immense. 'He will have destroyed the NUM as an effective fighting force within British trade unionism for the next 20 years. If kamikaze pilots were to form their own union, Arthur would be an ideal choice for leader.' It wowed the country – but appalled the comrades. From 1994, disillusioned, Reid moved away from Blair and New Labour. In 2001, he founded the Scottish Left Review; in 2005, he joined the SNP. In August 2010, Reid, 78, was felled by a brain haemorrhage. He was quintessentially a youth of the 1940s. Immaculately groomed, formally dressed and with the poise of Hollywood, Jimmy Reid could have stepped out of a Vettriano painting. Hugh Kerr, sometime Scottish Labour politician, met him for the last time in 2004, when the two addressed a London meeting of United Left MEPs. He recalled: 'At a good lunch afterwards, with his customary brandy and cigar, he said: 'Hugh, you know, there is nothing too good for the working class.' 'For me, he was a deeply human person who loved the good things in life: literature, music and, above all, people.'

Traders bet on no more rate cuts this year: Blow for borrowers as inflation hits 18-month high of 3.8%
Traders bet on no more rate cuts this year: Blow for borrowers as inflation hits 18-month high of 3.8%

Daily Mail​

time20 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Traders bet on no more rate cuts this year: Blow for borrowers as inflation hits 18-month high of 3.8%

Millions of borrowers were dealt a bitter blow yesterday as soaring inflation shattered hopes of an interest rate cut. Markets are now betting that rates will remain unchanged for the rest of the year after higher air fares, fuel and food prices pushed consumer price inflation to 3.8 per cent, up from 3.6 per cent in June. That was the highest level in 18 months and above forecasts of 3.7 per cent. It means prices in Britain are rising more quickly than anywhere else in the G7 group of advanced economies. And it piles pressure on the Bank of England – and governor Andrew Bailey – which is tasked with keeping inflation at 2 per cent. It is also a blow to Rachel Reeves, whose faltering stewardship of the economy has seen growth slow in recent months and unemployment rise by more than 200,000 since Labour came to power. Experts said the Chancellor's £25billion employer National Insurance raid, as well as a sharp increase in the minimum wage bore much of the blame for the rise in inflation as firms pass on higher costs to consumers. The Bank has already been turning more hawkish as it voted to cut rates to 4 per cent last month by the narrowest of margins. And it has also warned inflation will continue to rise, hitting 4 per cent by the end of this year. Last night, market betting suggested there was a near zero chance of a rate cut next month and just a one-in-four likelihood that the BoE will reduce rates in November. Traders also saw a 56 per cent probability of rates being held in December, meaning borrowers are likely to have to wait until February 2026 for any relief. Fears of persistent inflation have sent UK borrowing costs higher in recent days with yields on 30-year bonds, known as gilts, rising to the highest level since 1998 earlier this week. The sell-off in bonds – whose yields rise as prices fall – has since abated. But UK borrowing costs continue to be higher than those of other advanced economies. Yesterday's inflation figures are likely to have particularly concerned the Bank of England's rate-setting Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) because of an unexpectedly big jump in services sector prices – a metric that the Bank watches closely. Services sector inflation rose from 4.7 per cent in June to 5 per cent in July. The Bank has been steadily cutting rates since last summer after a bout of spiralling price rises – that saw inflation hit more than 11 per cent – appeared to have been brought under control as it came down to around 2 per cent. But it has since drifted upwards causing doubts that the Bank can continue on the same path. Elliott Jordan-Doak, senior UK economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said: 'Inflation is set to stay miles above target for the foreseeable future. We expect headline inflation to remain above 3 per cent until April 2026, forcing the MPC to stay on hold for the rest of this year at least.' Expectations that rates will stay higher for longer are likely to have an impact on fixed rate mortgage deals. David Hollingworth, associate director at L&C Mortgages, said: 'Mortgage borrowers have been enjoying a market where rates have been dropping. 'Fixed rates have been pricing in the recent and future cuts, so have been edging down with a host of deals now below 4 per cent. 'Those reductions have tended to come in small increments, but we could see that slow further or even reverse in some cases if the market reacts badly to the threat of higher inflation than was previously expected.'

Airbus staff plot 10-day strike: Union demands new pay deal amid rising inflation and cost of living concerns
Airbus staff plot 10-day strike: Union demands new pay deal amid rising inflation and cost of living concerns

Daily Mail​

time23 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Airbus staff plot 10-day strike: Union demands new pay deal amid rising inflation and cost of living concerns

Airbus workers will go on strike next month amid a pay row with bosses in a move that threatens to disrupt the production of plane wings. Thousands of the manufacturer's UK employees will walk out for ten days from early September, trade union Unite said. Unite, which represents more than 3,000 of the company's aircraft fitters and engineers, said 90 per cent of its members voting in the ballot had chosen industrial action. The strikes will go ahead unless the European jet maker presents an improved pay offer amid rising inflation and cost of living concerns, union officials warned. Strikes at the UK sites – including Broughton in Flintshire and Filton, near Bristol – could hamper the firm's plans to step up plane production, from 766 last year to 820 in 2025, amid growing demand. Strike plan: Industrial action at Airbus' UK sites - including Broughton in Flintshire (pictured) and Filton near Bristol - could disrupt wing production for commercial and military aircraft

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store