Business
Bookings open for Carmarthenshire Tourism and Business Roadshow
Carmarthenshire is a county with big ambitions. Over the last 2-years, Carmarthenshire County Council has supported just under 6,000 businesses, created 2902 jobs and safeguarded a further 950 jobs to date.
Keen to continue this support to local businesses and recognising that the tourism sector is worth over £1/2billion a year to Carmarthenshire’s economy, starting on November 30, officers from the County Council will embark on a Tourism and Business Roadshow of the county.
Our specialist officers will be travelling across Carmarthenshire to meet with businesses and community groups to offer business advice that will cover all aspects of the tourism and business sector; from licencing, planning, funding options, grants that are currently available to businesses as well as marketing support.
These sessions are free to attend but must be pre-booked. Bookable slots are now available for the 1st two roadshow events and are likely to be extremely popular, so book your place today by emailing [email protected]. Sessions are available as one on one or group appointments.
The first series of tourism and business industry roadshows will be held on November 30 at the Crochan Suit in Llanelli’s Ffwrnes Theatre, with the second event hosted on December 5 at the Cawdor Hall, Newcastle Emlyn. The events will start at 10:00am and finish at 4pm.
Throughout the session the Council’s specialist officers will offer free business advice relevant to your business. The Tourism Team will be on hand to explore how you can work with the Council on campaigns, filming opportunities, business events, and advice and guidance in relation to statutory regulations and funding.
Attendees can also learn about the latest plans for Carmarthenshire County Council’s 2023-24 marketing themes and have a flavour of the campaigns and creative content scheduled in our calendar for the year. We’ll also share news of how we’re moving towards a greater digital integration of our tourism and business facing websites. Come and find out how you can get involved!
We can offer suggestions on the kind of information the media need for travel articles, funding that is available in your area, and share our experience of working with Visit Wales and Visit Britain.
Carmarthenshire County Council has a wide range portfolio of grants and loans available to developers and business owners, come and find out what support is available to you and your business. Opportunities are available via the Shared Prosperity fund, the Start Up Fund and Business Growth Fund. There will also be support and guidance on funding available for rural businesses.
If you are planning an event, run a licensed establishment or are planning to collect charitable donations on the street Carmarthenshire County Council officers will be on hand to assist.
Advice will be given from Carmarthenshire County Council officers in relation to the new waste legislation along with information on LEQ initiatives such as the 2 minute litter pick boards.
There will be guidance and support for community, voluntary, charitable groups and social enterprises in Carmarthenshire. Officers will also be able to share information on the support available for Carmarthenshire based businesses from the Arfor programme and explain how young people across the county can be supported to develop new business ideas, gain employment and develop social activities in their area that supports the Welsh language.
The Tourism and Business Roadshows will offer a wide range of relevant expertise to help you to run your business – whether you’re long established and looking for new opportunities or thinking of setting up in the industry and in need of pointers to help you on your way.
Cllr. Hazel Evans, Cabinet Member for Regeneration Leisure Culture and Tourism said: “During the Tourism and Business Roadshow, our officers will be bringing a wide of expertise together, under one roof – giving Carmarthenshire businesses an opportunity to access specialist advice on funding, business, grants, waste management, licencing and event support, so book now to avoid missing out.”
These sessions are free to attend but must be pre-booked. To book your place, please email [email protected] with the following information:
Your name and business name
Which advisors you would like to book an appointment with (you can pick as many or as few as you like, please see the full list below)
What time you’d be able to arrive, and what time is the latest you could leave.
You will then be contacted with confirmation of each of your allocated time slots to confirm your booking.
Business
Community council objections to Tenby Lidl store scheme
PLANS for a new store on the edge of Tenby by retail giant Lidl, which has seen objections from the local community council, are likely to be heard next year.
In an application recently lodged with Pembrokeshire County Council back in October, Lidl GB Ltd, through agent CarneySweeney, seeks permission for a new 1,969sqm store on land at Park House Court, Narberth Road, New Hedges/Tenby, to the north of the Park Court Nursing Home.
The proposals for the latest specification Lidl store, which includes 103 parking spaces, would create 40 jobs, the applicants say.
The application follows draft proposals submitted in 2024 and public consultations on the scheme, with a leaflet drop delivered to 8,605 local properties; an information website, with online feedback form; and a public exhibition, held last December at the De Valence Pavillion in Tenby, with a follow-up community event held at New Hedges Village Hall, close to the site, publicised through an additional postcard issued to 2,060 properties.

Some 1,365 responses have been received, with 89 per cent of respondents expressing support for the proposals, the applicants say.
A supporting statement says: “Lidl is now exceptionally well established in the UK with the Company operating c.980 stores from sites and premises both within and outside town centres. Its market share continues to increase substantially, and the company is expanding its store network considerably. The UK operational model is based firmly on the success of Lidl’s operations abroad with more than 10,800 stores trading across Europe.
It adds: “The granting of planning permission for the erection of a new Lidl food store would increase the retail offer and boost the local economy. The new Lidl food store would create up to 40 employment opportunities for people of all ages and backgrounds, providing opportunities for training and career development. This in turn will create an upward spiral of economic benefits.”
Local community council St Mary Out Liberty Community Council has formally objected to the scheme, saying that, while it supports the scheme for a Lidl store in principle, recognising “the economic benefits a new retail store could bring,” it says the proposed location “is unsuitable, conflicts with planning policy, and cannot be supported in its current form”.
Its objections add: “The A478 is heavily congested in peak tourist months. A supermarket would worsen congestion, increase turning movements, and heighten risks to pedestrians, cyclists, and emergency access.”
It also raises concerns on the potential impact through “noise, lighting, traffic disturbance, and loss of quiet amenity” on a neighbouring residential care home.
An initial assessment by Pembrokeshire County Council, highlighted concerns about the visual impact, with the authority’s landscape officer commenting that the store would introduce “an intense urban function into an otherwise rural context”.
The report added: “It is not considered to be compatible with the character of the site and the area within which it is located; and furthermore, will lead to a harmful visual impact on the setting of the National Park.”
The application will be considered by county planners at a later date.
Business
Senedd approves £116m transitional relief for business rates
BUSINESSES facing sharp hikes in tax bills after the 2026 revaluation will see increases phased in over two years after the Senedd backed a new transitional relief scheme.
Senedd Members unanimously approved regulations to help businesses which face significant rises in non-domestic rates bills after a revaluation taking effect in April 2026.
The Welsh Government estimates the transitional relief will support 25,000 ratepayers at a cost of £77m in 2026/27 and £39m in 2027/28. The partial relief covers 67% of the increase in the first year and 34% in the second.
Mark Drakeford, Wales’ finance secretary, stressed the £116m scheme comes on top of permanent rate reliefs which are currently worth £250m a year. He said ratepayers for two-thirds of properties will pay no bill at all or receive some level of relief.
The former First Minister told the Senedd: “In providing this transitional relief scheme, we are closely replicating the scheme of relief we provided following the 2023 revaluation – supporting all areas of the tax base in a consistent and straightforward manner.”
The Conservatives’ Sam Rowlands expressed his party’s support for the transitional relief scheme which will help ratepayers facing sharp increases after the 2026 revaluation.

He said: “We are grateful that the Welsh Government has at least brought forward a scheme that will soften the immediate impact for thousands of Welsh businesses.
“We also understand that if these regulations are not approved or supported… this relief scheme will not be in existence. Many businesses across Wales would face steep increases with no protection at all and that is certainly not an outcome we would want.”
But the shadow finance secretary warned businesses up and down Wales are worried about the increase in rates that they are liable to pay.
Advocating scrapping rates for all small businesses in Wales, Mr Rowlands said: “We’ve heard first-hand from many of those in the hospitality and leisure sector, some of whom are facing increases of over 100% in the tax rates they are expected to pay.”
Responding as the Senedd signed off on the scheme on December 16, Prof Drakeford said the Welsh Government had to wait for the UK budget to know if funding was available. As a result of the time constraints, the regulations were not subject to formal consultation.
Prof Drakeford agreed with Mr Rowlands that voting against the regulations would not improve support, only eliminate the transitional relief package before the Senedd.

Earlier in Tuesday’s Senedd proceedings, former Tory group leader Paul Davies warned Welsh businesses have already been hit with some of the highest business rates in the UK.
He said: “The latest business rates revaluation has meant that some businesses are now facing rises of several hundred per cent compared with previous assessments…
“Whilst I appreciate that a transitional relief scheme will help some businesses manage these changes, the reality is that for many businesses it’s not enough and some businesses will be forced into a position where they will have to close.”
Business
Pembrokeshire industrial jobs ‘could be at risk’ as parties clash over investment
TRADE unions have warned that hundreds of industrial jobs in Pembrokeshire could be at risk without stronger long-term support for Welsh manufacturing, as political parties set out competing approaches ahead of the Senedd elections.
TUC Cymru says its analysis suggests 939 industrial jobs in Pembrokeshire could be vulnerable if investment in clean industrial upgrades were withdrawn, warning that policies proposed by Reform UK, and to a lesser extent the Conservatives, pose the greatest risk to industrial employment.
The warning comes as the union body launched its “Save Welsh Industry – No More Site Closures!” campaign at events in Deeside and Swansea, calling on all political parties to commit to a five-point plan to protect and future-proof Welsh industry.
According to TUC Cymru, jobs at risk locally include 434 in automotive supply chains, 183 in rubber and plastics and 75 in glass manufacturing. The union body says these sectors rely on continued investment to remain competitive and avoid offshoring.
TUC Cymru said its modelling focused on industries most exposed to closure or relocation if industrial modernisation and decarbonisation are not delivered. It argues that without sustained public and private investment, Welsh manufacturing faces further decline.
A GMB member working at Valero in Pembrokeshire said: “It’s clear Nigel Farage has no clear plan. I can see this industry collapsing under his policies. We need support, not division. His way will lead to job losses across the board and the lights will go out.”
The union body stressed that all parties need to strengthen their industrial policies, but claimed Reform UK’s stated opposition to net zero-related investment would place the largest number of jobs at risk across Wales, estimating that almost 40,000 industrial jobs nationally could be affected. Conservative policies were also criticised, though the TUC said the likelihood of job losses under the Conservatives was lower.
Labour has rejected claims that Welsh industry is being neglected, pointing to recent investment announcements made at the Wales Investment Summit, where more than £16bn worth of projects were highlighted as being in the pipeline across Wales.
Ministers said the summit demonstrated growing investor confidence, with projects linked to clean energy, advanced manufacturing, ports, digital infrastructure and battery storage, and thousands of jobs expected as schemes move from planning into delivery.
Labour has argued that public investment is being used to unlock private sector funding, particularly in industrial regions, and says modernising industry is essential to keeping Welsh manufacturing competitive while protecting long-term employment.
At UK level, the party has also highlighted its National Wealth Fund and GB Energy commitments, which it says will support domestic supply chains, reduce long-term energy costs for industry and help secure both existing and future jobs.
Opposition parties and some business groups have questioned whether all announced projects will translate into permanent employment, arguing that greater clarity is needed on timescales and delivery.
Reform UK has argued that scrapping net zero policies would cut public spending and reduce costs for households and businesses, while the Conservatives have pledged to roll back climate-related targets and reduce regulation on industry.
Unions dispute those claims, warning that higher electricity prices and a lack of investment would make Welsh industry less competitive internationally.
TUC Cymru President Tom Hoyles said Welsh industry needed urgent action from all parties to survive and thrive in the 21st century, warning that policies which sought to turn back the clock could put thousands of Welsh jobs at risk.
With industrial areas including Flintshire, Neath Port Talbot and Carmarthenshire also identified as facing significant pressures, the future of Welsh manufacturing is expected to remain a key political issue in the run-up to the Senedd elections.
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