Title
UK Energy Research Centre Phase 4

CoPED ID
8b39ca4d-2a4b-445c-a467-e60f6d094ee2

Status
Active


Value
£91,033,665

Start Date
April 30, 2019

End Date
Oct. 4, 2024

Description

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The UK energy system is changing rapidly. Greenhouse gas emissions fell by 43% between 1990 and 2017, and renewables now account for 30% of electricity generation. Despite this progress, achieving emissions reductions has been difficult outside the electricity sector, and progress could stall without more effective policy action. The Paris Agreement means that the UK may have to go further than current targets, to achieve a net zero energy system.

Reducing emissions is not the only important energy policy goal. Further, progress need to be made whilst minimising the costs to consumers and taxpayers; maintaining high levels of energy security; and maximising economic, environmental and social benefits.

There is a clear need for research to understand the nature of the technical, economic, political, environmental and societal dynamics affecting the energy system - including the local, national and international components of these dynamics. This proposal sets out UKERC's plans for a 4th phase of research and engagement (2019-2024) that addresses this challenge. It includes a programme of interdisciplinary research on sustainable future energy systems. This is driven by real-world energy challenges whilst exploring new questions, methods and agendas. It also explains how UKERC's central activities will be developed further, including new capabilities to support energy researchers and decision-makers.

The UKERC phase 4 research programme will focus on new challenges and opportunities for implementing the energy transition, and will be concerned with the three main questions:
- How will global, national and local developments influence the shape and pace of the UK's transition towards a low carbon energy system?
- What are the potential economic, political, social and environmental costs and benefits of energy system change, and how can they be distributed equitably?
- Which actors could take the lead in implementing the next stage of the UK's energy transition, and what are the implications for policy and governance?

To address these questions, the research programme includes seven interrelated research themes: UK energy in a global context; Local and regional energy systems; Energy, environment, and landscape; Energy infrastructure transitions; Energy for mobility; Energy systems for heat; and Industrial decarbonisation. The proposal sets out details of research within these themes, plans for associated PhD studentships and details of the flexible research fund that will be used to commission additional research projects, scoping studies and to support integration. A first integration project on energy and the economy will be undertaken at the start of UKERC phase 4.

The research themes are complemented by four national capabilities that form part of the research programme: an expanded Technology and Policy Assessment (TPA) capability; a new Energy Modelling Hub; the UKERC Energy Data Centre; and a new Public Engagement Observatory. Research within TPA and the Observatory will align and integrate with the main research themes. These four capabilities will also enhance UKERC's ability to provide evidence, data and expertise for academic, policy, industry and other stakeholder communities.

The UKERC headquarters (HQ) team will support the management and co-ordination of the research programme; and will also undertake a range of other functions to support the broader UK energy research community and its key stakeholders. These functions include promoting networking and engagement between stakeholders in academia, policy, industry and third sector (including through a networking fund), supporting career development and capacity building, and enhancing international collaboration (including through the UK's participation in the European Energy Research Alliance).


More Information

Potential Impact:
Building on our strong track record of delivering impact during previous phases, UKERC will continue to advance internationally leading interdisciplinary research on energy systems, maximise UK capacity, and engage broadly with our key stakeholders and the energy research community. The impact objectives for UKERC phase 4 are to:

1. Provide evidence to help the UK and devolved governments develop and implement the low carbon pathways necessary to meet their carbon targets, in line with the Paris Agreement.
2. Provide opportunities to the UK energy research community, building UK capacity, developing new agendas and delivering outputs of international importance.
3. Provide academia, policy-makers, industry, third sector organisations, and practitioners with timely research that can be easily and effectively used to inform decision-making.

UKERC's approach to impact will also focus on dynamic interactions between actors and their wider networks, including:
- Policy-makers and parliamentarians, through tailored engagement activities that provide insight into options, consequences, costs, and potential limitations of future energy policies.
- National and international researchers and organisations with interests in energy research, including academia, UKRI funded Centres and other Government funded research institutes.
- Industry through UKERC research reports, facilitating participation in future research needs workshops with the research community, and through access to a network of acknowledged experts, including those outside UKERC's research programme.
- Civil society and publics with interest in energy issues and climate change, through the dissemination of independent research on contemporary energy issues, issuing press releases to inform media debates.

A programme of activities will be implemented to increase the impact of UKERC's research and engagement activities with these communities. UKERC's communications and international strategies will be revised early in phase 4. All strategies will contain monitoring and evaluation (M&E) frameworks, which will enable continuous impact assessment and evaluation, and for lessons to be learnt and fed back into UKERC's operations.

University College London LEAD_ORG
University of East Anglia COLLAB_ORG
SHEFFIELD HALLAM UNIVERSITY COLLAB_ORG
Government of the UK COLLAB_ORG
Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) COLLAB_ORG
Centre for Research into Energy Demand Solutions COLLAB_ORG
European Energy Research Alliance (EERA) COLLAB_ORG
University College London COLLAB_ORG
Energy Systems Catapult Ltd COLLAB_ORG
Lancaster University COLLAB_ORG
University of Aberdeen COLLAB_ORG
INNOVATE UK COLLAB_ORG
UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS COLLAB_ORG
Department For Environment, Food And Rural Affairs (DEFRA) COLLAB_ORG
Energy Research Partnership COLLAB_ORG
Technical University of Denmark COLLAB_ORG
UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC) COLLAB_ORG
UNIVERSITY OF BIRMINGHAM COLLAB_ORG
Citizens Advice COLLAB_ORG
Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres COLLAB_ORG
Committee on Climate Change (CCC) COLLAB_ORG
Government of Scotland COLLAB_ORG
PLYMOUTH MARINE LABORATORY COLLAB_ORG
Free University of Amsterdam COLLAB_ORG
IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON COLLAB_ORG
United Kingdom Research and Innovation COLLAB_ORG
UNIVERSITY OF YORK COLLAB_ORG
Economic and Social Research Council COFUND_ORG
Natural Environment Research Council COFUND_ORG
Department for Transport PP_ORG
The Climate Change Committe PP_ORG
SP Energy Networks PP_ORG
University of Leeds PP_ORG
The Alan Turing Institute PP_ORG
Tata Steel (United Kingdom) PP_ORG
Marine Management Organisation PP_ORG
The Faraday Institution PP_ORG
Energy Sytems Catapult PP_ORG
Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy PP_ORG
Solar Trade Association PP_ORG
Welsh Government PP_ORG
Aldersgate Group PP_ORG
Association for Decentralised Energy PP_ORG
National Grid (United Kingdom) PP_ORG
Royal Town Planning Institute PP_ORG

Robert Gross PI_PER
Christina Demski COI_PER
Keith Bell COI_PER
Gail Taylor COI_PER
Astley Hastings COI_PER
Jim Halliday COI_PER
Paolo Agnolucci COI_PER
Alona Armstrong COI_PER
Andrew Lovett COI_PER
Anna Orlowska COI_PER
Jianzhong Wu COI_PER
Antony Patrick Froggatt COI_PER
Catherine Jones COI_PER
Peter Taylor COI_PER
Felix Eigenbrod COI_PER
Stephen Allen COI_PER
Nicholas Pidgeon COI_PER
Simon Shepherd COI_PER
Mark Winskel COI_PER
Gavin Bridge COI_PER
Marco Sakai COI_PER
Amii Harwood COI_PER
Janette Webb COI_PER
Paul Dodds COI_PER
Ronan Bolton COI_PER
Brett Day COI_PER
John Barrett COI_PER
Jim Watson COI_PER
Tom Hargreaves COI_PER
Christian Brand COI_PER
Simin Davoudi COI_PER
Jason Chilvers COI_PER
Nicola Beaumont COI_PER
Jillian Anable COI_PER
Zia Wadud COI_PER
Greg Marsden COI_PER
John Broderick COI_PER
Meysam Qadrdan COI_PER
Robert Bailey COI_PER
Michael Bradshaw COI_PER
Paul Ekins COI_PER
Bridget Woodman COI_PER
Amanda Lea-Langton COI_PER
Caroline Mullen COI_PER
Neil Strachan COI_PER
Helen Pallett COI_PER
Caroline Kuzemko COI_PER
Tara Hooper RESEARCH_PER
Robert Holland RESEARCH_PER
Vincenzo De Lipsis RESEARCH_PER
Sarah Becker RESEARCH_PER
Graeme Hawker RESEARCH_PER
Philip Heptonstall RESEARCH_PER
Lesley Wright RESEARCH_PER
Richard Lowes RESEARCH_PER
Catherine Hampton RESEARCH_PER
Sarah James RESEARCH_PER
Steve Pye RESEARCH_PER
Matthew Winning RESEARCH_PER
Emily Cox RESEARCH_PER
CHRYSANTHI RAPTI RESEARCH_PER
Oliver Broad RESEARCH_COI_PER
Gavin Killip RESEARCH_COI_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Energy policy
  2. Sustainable development
  3. Climate changes
  4. Energy
  5. Emissions
  6. Environmental policy
  7. Energy systems
  8. Environmental effects
  9. Renewable energy sources
  10. Energy technology
  11. Research programmes
  12. European Union countries

Extracted key phrases
  1. Broad UK energy research community
  2. UK energy system
  3. UK Energy Research Centre Phase
  4. Energy system change
  5. Low carbon energy system
  6. Sustainable future energy system
  7. Regional energy system
  8. UKERC Energy Data Centre
  9. Future energy policy
  10. UK capacity
  11. Important energy policy goal
  12. UKERC research report
  13. Energy infrastructure transition
  14. Energy transition
  15. World energy challenge

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations