A consortium of UK aerospace, automotive and medical businesses that has come together to produce medical ventilators for the NHS is celebrating two months since it was formed.

Since March 19 VentilatorChallengeUK - of which Airbus is a member - has focused its efforts on scaling up production of two devices.

One is an existing design made by Smiths Group and the other is a new device based on an adaptation of existing technology from Oxfordshire-based Penlon.

VentilatorChallengeUK has worked closely with Penlon to modify and scale up production of its Penlon Prima ES02 device.

The ventilator received MHRA approval on April 15, becoming the first newly adapted ventilator design to be given regulatory authorisation as part of the UK Government’s fight against COVID19.

As well as producing the Penlon Prima ESO2 device, VentilatorChallengeUK has also supported Smiths Group in scaling up the delivery of its paraPAC plus™ ventilator with three brand-new production sites established in the past eight weeks at GKN Aerospace’s facilities at Luton and at Cowes and Rolls Royce at Filton.

In total, the 33-strong consortium has seen more than 5,500 people working around the clock across nine sites to deliver both models of ventilator into the NHS.

Together, Penlon and Smiths would ordinarily have combined capacity to produce between 50 and 60 ventilators per week.

Today the consortium is producing between 100-200 of the combined units per day as it seeks to deliver increased ventilator capacity to the UK.

Dick Elsy, chairman of VentilatorChallengeUK and CEO of High Value Manufacturing Catapult, said: “We have covered an incredible amount of ground in the two months since the Consortium was formed.

"The progress we have made is testament to the effort and energy brought to the challenge by every member of the VentilatorChallengeUK Consortium team.

"They have never wavered in their determination to make sure that our NHS always has the number of ventilators it needs to treat this virus.

“Although the UK is widely accepted to have passed the peak of infections in this first phase of the pandemic, we are continuing to scale up our production capabilities to make sure that there is always a ventilator available when a patient needs it should a second wave strike the UK.

"I look forward to seeing VentilatorChallengeUK deliver even more ventilators over the coming weeks.”