Concerning the "Made in UK" topic:
That does not necessarily mean that the whole production (from emulsion making to converting) is done there, at Harman technology / Ilford Photo.
There are two other possibilities, too:
1. Emulsion production and coating is done by Fujifilm in Japan, but converting / finishing is done by Harman. Just have a look at some of the Lomography CN films: The film is made by Kodak, and then the master rolls are shipped to China for converting. On the films "Made in China" is printed.
The regulations for the "Made in...." differ from country to country. But it looks like if final assembling and QC is done in a country, and this assembly is responsible for a certain part of the added value, then a "Made in..." of the country of that final production step is correct. And that is the case with film converting.
Why would Fujifilm go that way?
Fujifilm has significant backorders for their colour film (especially CN film) for over a year now. Demand is surpassing supply (production capacity). Looks like converting is the bottleneck. With Acros II converting in addition on the same converting lines the backorder problem for colour film would even increase. So an outsourcing of converting would make sense in such a situation.
2. Emulsion is made by Fujifilm, and coating and converting is done by Harman technology. In this case much more work is needed, because the emulsion has to be adapted to the Ilford coating machine.
And such an adaption process is not trivial. But by that Fujifilm could keep its unique know-how concerning the Acros emulsion. And transport of emulsion is not a problem at all: I have seen emulsion "bricks" at my factory visits: Photo emulsions are not in liquid form after production has finished, they have a kind of "gelee" consistance, solid, but a bit flexible (before coating they are heated and become a liquid). They are packed in black resin packages, which can be easily transported. That emulsions were made at one factory, and coating was done at a different factory abroad, has been (and is) the case in film production several times. It is not unusual.
Why would Fujifilm go that way?
From my Ilford factory visit and my talks to Simon I know that Ilford has the capability to make small(er) coating runs quite efficiently. Maybe Fujifilm's analysis came to the conclusion that expected demand for Acros II and Ilford's coating flexibility and efficiency are a better match currently.
Both are possibilities. Not more, not less.
Currently we don't know which route Fujifilm has choosen and why. But I think both Fujifilm and Harman technology have well analysed for themselves the benefits of this cooperation.
For us photographers much, much more important is how similar Acros II will be to Acros. Whether there will be significant differences or even improvements. I am looking forward to test it

.
Best regards,
Henning