Off grid, decarbonised energy supplies for temporary buildings

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Title
Off grid, decarbonised energy supplies for temporary buildings

CoPED ID
66b45e68-5980-48b5-84da-50439b5db67f

Status
Active


Value
No funds listed.

Start Date
Feb. 1, 2023

End Date
Jan. 30, 2027

Description

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The project involves the decarbonisation of the fuel supplies required to support heating and energy management of temporary buildings. Large numbers of temporary and remote installations are utilised to support a variety of applications, including the construction and energy generation industries. Currently, these buildings are either directly connected to the utility grid, where available, or powered from standalone generators (usually diesel powered). Typically, this approach leads to a high carbon footprint for the temporary installations, with undesired pollution, especially when some remote installations are at ecologically sensitive sites. The project aims to investigate the whole energy system of these installations to develop holistic approaches to the energy generation and control, relying on low carbon fuels for generation and energy storage to backfill the generational dead times which typically occur with green generation (PV, Wind etc).


More Information

Potential Impact:
The proposed Centre will benefit the following groups

1. Students - develop their professional skills, a broad technical and societal knowledge of the sector and a wider appreciation of the role decarbonised fuel systems will play in the UK and internationally. They will develop a strong network of peers who they can draw on in their professional careers. We will continue to offer our training to other Research Council PhD students and cross-fertilise our training with that offered under other CDT programmes, and similar initiatives where that develops mutual benefit. We will further enhance this offering by encouraging industrialists to undertake some of our training as Professional Development ensuring a broadening of the training cohort beyond academe. Students will be very employable due to their knowledge, skills and broad industrial understanding.
2. Industrial partners - Companies identify research priorities that underpin their long-term business goals and can access state of the art facilities within the HEIs involved to support that research. They do not need to pre-define the scope of their work at the outset, so that the Centre can remain responsive to their developing research needs. They may develop new products, services or models and have access to a potential employee cohort, with an advanced skill base. We have already established a track record in our predecessor CDTs, with graduates now acting as research managers and project supervisors within industry
3. Academic partners - accelerating research within the Energy research community in each HEI. We will develop the next generation of researchers and research leaders with a broader perspective than traditional PhD research and create a bedrock of research expertise within each HEI, developing supervisory skills across a broad range of topics and faculties and supporting HEIs' goals of high quality publications leading to research impacts and an informed group of educators within each HEI. .
4. Government and regulators - we will liaise with national and regional regulators and policy makers. We will conduct research directly aligned with the Government's Clean Growth Strategy, Mission Innovation and with the Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund's theme Prosper from the Energy Revolution, to help meet emission, energy security and affordability targets and we will seek to inform developing energy policy through new findings and impartial scientific advice. We will help to provide the skills base and future innovators to enable growth in the decarbonised energy sector.
5. Wider society and the publics - developing technologies to reduce carbon emissions and reduce the cost of a transition to a low carbon economy. Need to ascertain the publics' views on the proposed new technologies to ensure we are aligned with their views and that there will be general acceptance of the new technologies. Public engagement will be a two-way conversation where researchers will listen to the views of different publics, acknowledging that there are many publics and not just one uniform group. We will actively engage with public from including schools, our local communities and the 'interested' public, seeking to be honest providers of unbiased technical information in a way that is correct yet accessible.

Erica Ballantyne SUPER_PER
David Stone SUPER_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Energy policy
  2. Development (active)
  3. Emissions
  4. Sustainable development
  5. Renewable energy sources
  6. Innovation policy
  7. Energy management

Extracted key phrases
  1. Energy supply
  2. Energy generation industry
  3. Temporary building
  4. Decarbonised energy sector
  5. Energy management
  6. Energy system
  7. Energy policy
  8. Energy storage
  9. Energy security
  10. Temporary installation
  11. Utility grid
  12. Fuel supply
  13. Energy research community
  14. Low carbon fuel
  15. Research need

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations