
RenewableUK
RenewableUK
7 Projects, page 1 of 2
assignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2027Partners:Orsted (UK), Nova Innovation, Plymouth University, SSE Energy Supply Limited UK, Fraunhofer Society +78 partnersOrsted (UK),Nova Innovation,Plymouth University,SSE Energy Supply Limited UK,Fraunhofer Society,EDGE Solutions Limited,DNV GL (UK),Fugro (United Kingdom),RES,Lloyd's Register Foundation,DNV GL (UK),Vestas Wind Systems A/S,Marine Scotland,Fugro GEOS Ltd,James Fisher Marine Services,Scottish Power (United Kingdom),Wood Group,FHG,Energy Technology Partnership,EDGE Solutions Limited,Vattenfall Wind Power Ltd,RenewableUK,Vestas (Denmark),E.ON Climate & Renewables GmbH,OFFSHORE RENEWABLE ENERGY CATAPULT,Orsted,Tufts University,Atlantis Operations (UK) Ltd,MSS,Nova Innovation Ltd,EireComposites Teo,University of Western Australia,Nordex SE Hamburg,Energy Technology Partnership,Atkins (United Kingdom),Lloyd's Register Foundation,EireComposites Teo,Ramboll Wind,Nordex SE Hamburg,RenewableUK,Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult,UWA,BVG Associates Ltd,Siemens AG (International),Siemens AG,Ramboll Wind,Babcock International Group Plc (UK),Sennen,E.ON Climate & Renewables GmbH,Subsea UK,University of Strathclyde,Lloyd's Register Foundation,Sennen,Adwen Technology,Met Office,BVG Associates Ltd,Renewable Energy Systems (United Kingdom),SSE Energy Supply Limited UK,Wood Group,Adwen Technology,James Fisher Marine Services,MSS,University of Strathclyde,Scottish Power (United Kingdom),Vattenfall (United Kingdom),Tufts University,SSE Energy Supply Limited UK,Subsea UK,Atkins Ltd,Babcock International Group Plc,MET OFFICE,Insight Analytics Solutions,Insight Analytics Solutions,Scottish Power (United Kingdom),SCOTTISH POWER UK PLC,Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult,RES,Vestas (Denmark),Atkins Ltd,Atlantis Operations (UK) Ltd,Tufts University,Met Office,Babcock International Group (United Kingdom)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/S023801/1Funder Contribution: 6,423,730 GBPThis proposal is for a new EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Wind and Marine Energy Systems and Structures (CDT-WAMSS) which joins together two successful EPSRC CDTs, their industrial partners and strong track records of training more than 130 researchers to date in offshore renewable energy (ORE). The new CDT will create a comprehensive, world-leading centre covering all aspects of wind and marine renewable energy, both above and below the water. It will produce highly skilled industry-ready engineers with multidisciplinary expertise, deep specialist knowledge and a broad understanding of pertinent whole-energy systems. Our graduates will be future leaders in industry and academia world-wide, driving development of the ORE sector, helping to deliver the Government's carbon reduction targets for 2050 and ensuring that the UK remains at the forefront of this vitally important sector. In order to prepare students for the sector in which they will work, CDT-WAMSS will look to the future and focus on areas that will be relevant from 2023 onwards, which are not necessarily the issues of the past and present. For this reason, the scope of CDT-WAMSS will, in addition to in-stilling a solid understanding of wind and marine energy technologies and engineering, have a particular emphasis on: safety and safe systems, emerging advanced power and control technologies, floating substructures, novel foundation and anchoring systems, materials and structural integrity, remote monitoring and inspection including autonomous intervention, all within a cost competitive and environmentally sensitive context. The proposed new EPSRC CDT in Wind and Marine Energy Systems and Structures will provide an unrivalled Offshore Renewable Energy training environment supporting 70 students over five cohorts on a four-year doctorate, with a critical mass of over 100 academic supervisors of internationally recognised research excellence in ORE. The distinct and flexible cohort approach to training, with professional engineering peer-to-peer learning both within and across cohorts, will provide students with opportunities to benefit from such support throughout their doctorate, not just in the first year. An exceptionally strong industrial participation through funding a large number of studentships and provision of advice and contributions to the training programme will ensure that the training and research is relevant and will have a direct impact on the delivery of the UK's carbon reduction targets, allowing the country to retain its world-leading position in this enormously exciting and important sector.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2014 - 2022Partners:Qioptiq Ltd, ZJOU, Fugro Geoconsulting Limited, E.ON (United Kingdom), Aristotle University of Thessaloniki +78 partnersQioptiq Ltd,ZJOU,Fugro Geoconsulting Limited,E.ON (United Kingdom),Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,Heriot-Watt University,Mojo Maritime Ltd,Ørsted (Denmark),Goa University,Arup Group (United Kingdom),Tata Group UK,ZJOU,SMRE,Leibniz Univ of Hannover (replaced),UniGe,Technical University of Lisbon,Fugro (United Kingdom),Mojo Maritime Ltd,NTNU Norwegian Uni of Science & Tech,Arup Group Ltd,Subsea 7 Limited,GE (General Electric Company) UK,Ørsted (Denmark),SKANSKA,Det Norske Veritas BV DNV,Subsea 7 Limited,Aalborg University,Tata Steel (United Kingdom),H R Wallingford Ltd,Heriot-Watt University,E.ON New Build and Technology Ltd,E.ON New Build and Technology Ltd,Centrica Renewable Energy Limited,E.ON New Build and Technology Ltd,SKANSKA,CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY,Qinetiq (United Kingdom),UCD,RenewableUK,Zhejiang University,H R Wallingford Ltd,HR Wallingford,Det Norske Veritas BV DNV,Qioptiq Ltd,General Electric (United Kingdom),Health and Safety Executive (HSE),Arup Group,NTNU Nor Uni of Sci & Tech (Remove),RES,NTNU Norwegian Uni of Science & Tech,Ørsted (Denmark),Skanska (United Kingdom),Cranfield University,Xodus Group UK,Tata Steel (United Kingdom),Heriot-Watt University,Health and Safety Executive,Arup Group Ltd,Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,[no title available],RWE (United Kingdom),Cranfield University,SMRE,Renewable Energy Systems (United Kingdom),Technical University of Lisbon,Norwegian University of Science and Technology,EDF Energy Plc (UK),EDF Energy (United Kingdom),Fugro (United Kingdom),RES,Xodus Group UK,Fugro Geoconsulting Limited,Centrica Renewable Energy Limited,EDF Energy (United Kingdom),RWE npower,GE (General Electric Company) UK,EDF Energy (United Kingdom),RenewableUK,UWA,University of Hannover,University of Western Australia,AAU,RWE npowerFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/L016303/1Funder Contribution: 3,995,600 GBPThis proposal is for a Doctoral Training Centre to provide a new generation of engineering leaders in Offshore & Marine Renewable Energy Structures. This is a unique opportunity for two internationally leading Universities to join together to provide an industrially-focussed centre of excellence in this pivotal subject area. The majority of informed and balanced views suggest approximately 180 TWh/year of offshore wind, ~300km of wave farms (19 TWh/year), 1,000 tidal stream turbines (6 TWh/year) and 3 small tidal range schemes (3 TWh/year) are desirable/achievable using David MacKay's UK DECC 2050 Pathways calculator. These together would represent 30% of predicted actual UK electricity demand. This would be a truly enormous renewable energy contribution to the UK electricity supply, given the predicted increase of electricity demand in the transport sector. The inclusion of onshore wind brings this figure closer to 38% of UK electricity by 2050. RenewablesUK predicts Britain has the opportunity to lead the world in developing the emerging marine energy industry with the sector having the potential to employ 10,000 people and generate revenues of nearly £4bn per year by 2020. The large scale development of offshore renewable energy (Wind, Wave and Tidal) represents one of the biggest opportunities for sustainable economic growth in the UK for a generation. The emerging offshore wind sector is however unlike the Oil & Gas industry in that structures are unmanned, fabricated in much larger volumes and the commercial reality is that the sector has to proactively take measures to further reduce CAPEX and OPEX. Support structures need to be structurally optimised and to avail of contemporary and emerging methodologies in structural integrity design and assessment. Current offshore design standards and practices are based on Offshore Oil & Gas experience which relates to unrepresentative target structural reliability, machine and structural loading characteristics and scaling issues particularly with respect to large diameter piled structural systems. To date Universities and the Industry have done a tremendous job to help device developers test and trial different concepts however the challenge now moves to the next stage to ensure these technologies can be manufactured in volume and deployed at the right cost including installation and maintenance over the full design life. This is a proposal to marry together Marine and Offshore Structures expertise with emerging large steel fabrication and welding/joining technologies to ensure graduates from the programme will have the prerequisite knowledge and experience of integrated structural systems to support the developing Offshore and Marine Renewable Energy sector. The Renewable Energy Marine Structures (REMS) Doctoral Centre CDT will embrace the full spectrum of Structural Analysis in the Marine Environment, Materials and Engineering Structural Integrity, Geotechnical Engineering, Foundation Design, Site Investigation, Soil-Structure Interaction, Inspection, Monitoring and NDT through to Environmental Impact and Quantitative Risk and Reliability Analysis so that the UK can lead the world-wide development of a new generation of marine structures and support systems for renewable energy. The Cranfield-Oxford partnership brings together an unrivalled team of internationally leading expertise in the design, manufacture, operation and maintenance of offshore structural systems and together with the industrial partnerships forged as part of this bid promises a truly world-leading centre in Marine Structures for the 21st Century.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2018 - 2023Partners:Carbon Trust, DTU, OPENHYDRO GROUP LIMITED, BP Global, Crown Estate (United Kingdom) +55 partnersCarbon Trust,DTU,OPENHYDRO GROUP LIMITED,BP Global,Crown Estate (United Kingdom),Siemens (United Kingdom),Wave Hub,MSS,Technical University of Denmark,Arup Group (United Kingdom),Plymouth University,Naval Group (Ireland),Marine Scotland,BP Global,RenewableUK,Atlantis Operations (UK) Ltd,Carnegie Wave Energy Ltd (UK),Arup Group,Atkins Global (UK),Atkins (United Kingdom),Norwegian Geotechnical Institute,Arup Group Ltd,Arup Group Ltd,Siemens PLC,EDF Energy Plc (UK),University of Western Australia,SIEMENS PLC,European Marine Energy Centre,OFFSHORE RENEWABLE ENERGY CATAPULT,Fugro GEOS Ltd,Green Alliance,NGI,Wave Hub,LR IMEA,Carnegie Wave Energy Ltd (UK),Wave Energy Scotland,Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult,Lloyd's Register Foundation,Wave Energy Scotland,EDF Energy (United Kingdom),Fugro (United Kingdom),Garrad Balfour Ltd.,Carbon Trust,EDF Energy (United Kingdom),Carbon Trust,SIEMENS PLC,RenewableUK,Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult,UWA,Technical University of Denmark,OPENHYDRO GROUP LIMITED,EDF Energy (United Kingdom),Green Alliance,The Crown Estate,LR IMEA,European Marine Energy Centre,Atkins Global,Atlantis Operations (UK) Ltd,MSS,Garrad Balfour Ltd.Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/S000747/1Funder Contribution: 9,097,480 GBPThe UK is at the forefront of the development, adoption and export of Offshore Renewable Energy (ORE) technologies: offshore wind (OW), wave and tidal energy. To sustain this advantage, the UK must spearhead research and innovation in ORE, which will accelerate its adoption and widen the applicability of these technologies. Many organisations across the industry-academia spectrum contribute to ORE research and development (R&D) co-ordination and the ORE Supergen hub strategy will take a leadership role, integrating with these activities to guide and deliver fundamental research to advance the ORE sector. The role of the Supergen ORE hub is to provide research leadership for the ORE community to enable transformation to future scale ORE. The hub will articulate the vision for the future scale ORE energy landscape, will identify the innovations required and the fundamental research needed to underpin the innovation. It will also generate the pathway for translation of research and innovation into industry practice, for policy adaptation and public awareness in order to support the increased deployment of ORE technologies, reducing energy costs while increasing energy security, reducing CO2 emissions and supporting UK jobs. The hub will work closely with the ORE Catapult (ORECAT) and become well-connected with industry, government, the wider research community in the UK and internationally. It will bring together these groups to assemble the expertise and experience to define and target the innovations, research and actions to achieve the ambitious energy transformation envisioned for the UK. The new Supergen ORE hub will continue to support and build on the existing internationally leading academic capacity within these three research areas (OW, wave and tidal technology), whilst also enabling shared learning on common research challenges. The ORE hub will build a multi-disciplinary, collaborative approach, which will bring benefits through the sharing of best practice and exploitation of synergy, support equality and diversity and the development of the next generation of research leaders. The hub strategy provides an overview of research and innovation priorities, which will be addressed through multiple routes but linked through the hub, with activities designed to stimulate alignment across the research community and industry sectors to maximise engagement with prioritised research challenges through and beyond the hub time-scale. These include: 1. Networking and engagement activities to bring the research community together with industry and other stakeholders to ensure research efforts within the community are aligned, complementary and remain inspired by or relevant to industry challenges. This will include support and development of the ECR community to ensure sustainability and promote EDI within the sector as a whole. Actions will also be taken to identify potential cross over research synergies and opportunities for transfer of research between sectors and disciplines, both within and external to ORE. Furthermore, a structured communication plan built around progress of the community towards the sector research challenges will promote exploitation and commercialisation. 2. A set of core research work packages addressing priority topics selected and structured to maximize progress towards the sector objectives and building on the cross cutting expertise of the co-director team. 3. Targeted use of flexible fund as seed-corn activity leading to projects aligned with, and in partnership with, the hub.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2013 - 2014Partners:SP GENERAT, RSPB Scotland, MSS, British Trust for Ornithology, Marine Scotland +15 partnersSP GENERAT,RSPB Scotland,MSS,British Trust for Ornithology,Marine Scotland,PMSS,University of the Highlands and Islands,RenewableUK,BTO,Scottish Power Renewables Ltd,UHI,SP GENERAT,PMSS,BTO,RenewableUK,UHI,RSPB Scotland,Scottish Power (United Kingdom),RSPB Scotland,MSSFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/L002728/1Funder Contribution: 80,798 GBPThe wind energy sector is an industry of strategic national importance, which can help secure our energy supplies, reduce our emissions and dependence on imported fossil fuels, and protect our environment. It is an industry on which our clean energy future rests. Despite the positive benefits of wind farms however, there is concern and uncertainty over the possible negative effects wind turbines may have on the environment, particularly on birds. For example, uncertainty remains over collision mortality i.e. the number of birds killed directly through collision with wind turbines. These uncertainties are far from trivial for the industry and have real consequences, potentially delaying wind farm projects and inhibiting the ability of the UK to meet its binding 2020 targets. Three projects in Round 2 of wind farm developments in the UK were delayed by over three years due in part to uncertainties over the assessment of impacts. Therefore better quantification of the uncertainty and variability associated with the estimation of impacts is required. During Environmental Impact Assessments of wind farm developments, bird collision mortality is estimated using a mathematical model which describes the interaction of a bird with a wind turbine and predicts the risks of bird collisions with turbines. There are a limited number of collision risk models in use, not only in the UK but globally. However, it is recognised by many, including industry, statutory nature conservation agencies and academics that there is much room for improvement of these models. For example, collision risk models are deterministic and rarely include variation in the input parameters such as bird density, or bird biometrics which are inherently variable, but instead use average values. Additionally, any uncertainty in these values is not expressed. Adopting a single best value for parameters may reduce complexity and increase the accessibility of results for decision-makers however it can be misleading because it ignores the range of consequences that are plausible. This project aims to i) review current models that are used to predict bird collision mortality caused by wind farm developments, ii) determine statistical methods suited to address any shortcomings of current models and then, using this information, iii) develop an updated model which incorporates variability and uncertainty. Reviewing current models and highlighting their strengths and weaknesses, as well as reviewing methods to incorporate variability and uncertainty will aid the development of a product, a collision risk model, which is fit for purpose. Development of the understanding of uncertainty in the outputs of collision risk models will be a key part of this project, and will be of direct benefit to industry, government advisors and regulators in the assessment and licensing processes for wind farm projects. The involvement of these parties will be vital in steering this project because any revision of a collision risk model has to function to better inform planning decisions for wind farm developments. To ensure that all relevant parties are involved, contribute and ultimately buy-in to the development of a new, updated model, there will be a workshop to discuss issues surrounding current practices to which developers, licensing authorities, statutory nature conservation bodies, academics and others will be invited. Also, to ensure the outputs of this project have impact and are used by the industry, the model and any documents produced will be made freely available and accessible through a dedicated webpage. Wind energy has an important role in meeting energy targets, so there is a clear need to ensure that decisions made through the planning processes use the best available information, data and models. Improved understanding of the risks of collision to birds - a key effect considered in ornithological impact assessments of wind farms - is thus vital.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2015 - 2016Partners:UNIVERSITY OF EXETER, Natural Resources Wales, University of Exeter, RenewableUK, Ecotricity +6 partnersUNIVERSITY OF EXETER,Natural Resources Wales,University of Exeter,RenewableUK,Ecotricity,Natural Resources Wales,Ecotricity,RenewableUK,Natural Resources Wales,University of Exeter,Natural Resources WalesFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: NE/M021882/1Funder Contribution: 99,897 GBPThe UK is the third largest generator of wind power in Europe, with 584 projects, 4,366 turbines and four of the five largest European wind farms. Conflicts between wind energy generation and bats - animals with high legal protection across Europe - therefore have important implications for the economy and energy security as well as biodiversity. We are currently concluding research that has quantified the scale of collision and disturbance impacts and examined potential predictors of risk. This is the only work in the UK to address this issue at commercial scale wind energy installations. The purpose of the current project is to determine with stakeholders the practical applications of the environmental data and expertise amassed during this extensive and costly research, and to package these with the assistance of users into accessible formats to facilitate more effective management of the environmental impacts of wind energy production. Stakeholders have emphasised to us that evidence-based decision making requires that they not only have access to the overall results of scientific analyses, but to information and guidance on which to base best-practice for future commercial surveys and monitoring. Because of our extensive research, we have available a unique dataset on bat activity and casualty rates at wind turbine sites across the UK, as well as unparalleled experience in practical monitoring techniques: this project will allow these to be shared with end-users. Specific outputs will include species- and region-specific reference ranges for bat activity levels, allowing stakeholders to contextualise and interpret the bat activity levels routinely recorded in surveys conducted by ecological consultants; Geographic Information System (GIS) layers to facilitate evidence-based decision making about cumulative ecological impacts; information on appropriate monitoring techniques; and assistance with understanding the potential consequences of developments for local and national bat populations. The direct beneficiaries will be wind energy developers and operators (industry), professional ecological consultants (service providers), local government ecologists and planning committees (decision makers), and Statutory Nature Conservation Organisations (SNCOs, policy makers). Keywords: environmental impact assessment; wind turbines; bats; ecological data; wind energy Stakeholders: Statutory Nature Conservation Organisations (Natural Resources Wales, Natural England, Scottish Natural Heritage) Local Authority Ecologists and Planners (including The Association of Local Government Ecologists) Professional Ecological Consultants (including the Chartered Institute of Ecology and Environmental Management) Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Department of Energy and Climate Change Wind energy developers and operators (including all of the major energy suppliers as well as installers of small energy systems) Non-governmental wildlife conservation organisations (e.g. Bat Conservation Trust, The Wildlife Trusts)
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