
Infrastructure UK
Infrastructure UK
4 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2011 - 2011Partners:Arup Group (United Kingdom), Black & Veatch, NWL, Black & Veatch (United Kingdom), E ON Central Networks plc +83 partnersArup Group (United Kingdom),Black & Veatch,NWL,Black & Veatch (United Kingdom),E ON Central Networks plc,Ordnance Survey,Met Office,BAM Nuttall (United Kingdom),BT Laboratories,Swanbarton Limited,CABE,Local Government Group,DfT,Scottish and Southern Energy SSE plc,DEFRA,OS,Department for Transport,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),Parsons Brinckerhoff,Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government,Institution of Mechanical Engineers,Association of North East Councils,MWH (United Kingdom),Atkins (United Kingdom),Swanbarton (United Kingdom),Jacobs (United Kingdom),DECC,Institution of Engineering and Technology,Government of the United Kingdom,Yorkshire Water,COSTAIN LTD,Kelda Group (United Kingdom),KTN - Energy Generation and Supply,National Grid PLC,Design Council,BT Research,MWH UK Ltd,Costain (United Kingdom),Willis Towers Watson (United Kingdom),Dept for Env Food & Rural Affairs DEFRA,Highways Agency,Infrastructure UK,Parsons Brinckerhoff,Institution of Mechanical Engineers,Association of North East Councils,Veolia Environmental Services,EA,Veolia (United Kingdom),BAM Nuttall Ltd,Infrastructure and Project Authority,Atkins UK,Arup Group Ltd,Met Office,Newcastle University,Town & Country Planning ASS,Transport Scotland,Transport Scotland,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),Environment Agency,ICE,Willis Limited,The Institution of Engineering and Tech,Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs,Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy,UK Water Industry Research Ltd,Network Rail,Northumbrian Water Group plc,Town and Country Planning Association,Newcastle University,Royal Haskoning,B P International Ltd,E.ON E&P UK Ltd,Halcrow Group Limited,Communities and Local Government,Royal Haskoning,BP (United Kingdom),United Utilities (United Kingdom),JBA Consulting,United Utilities,Network Rail,The Cabinet Office,Local Government Improvement and Development,National Grid (United Kingdom),UK Water Industry Research,Scottish and Southern Energy (United Kingdom),Jeremy Benn Associates (United Kingdom),Institution of Civil Engineers,Innovate UKFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/I01344X/1Funder Contribution: 4,730,840 GBPNational infrastructure (NI) systems (energy, transport, water, waste and ICT) in the UK and in advanced economies globally face serious challenges. The 2009 Council for Science and Technology (CST) report on NI in the UK identified significant vulnerabilities, capacity limitations and a number of NI components nearing the end of their useful life. It also highlighted serious fragmentation in the arrangements for infrastructure provision in the UK. There is an urgent need to reduce carbon emissions from infrastructure, to respond to future demographic, social and lifestyle changes and to build resilience to intensifying impacts of climate change. If this process of transforming NI is to take place efficiently, whilst also minimising the associated risks, it will need to be underpinned by a long-term, cross-sectoral approach to understanding NI performance under a range of possible futures. The 'systems of systems' analysis that must form the basis for such a strategic approach does not yet exist - this inter-disciplinary research programme will provide it.The aim of the UK Infrastructure Transitions Research Consortium is to develop and demonstrate a new generation of system simulation models and tools to inform analysis, planning and design of NI. The research will deal with energy, transport, water, waste and ICT systems at a national scale, developing new methods for analysing their performance, risks and interdependencies. It will provide a virtual environment in which we will test strategies for long term investment in NI and understand how alternative strategies perform with respect to policy constraints such as reliability and security of supply, cost, carbon emissions, and adaptability to demographic and climate change.The research programme is structured around four major challenges:1. How can infrastructure capacity and demand be balanced in an uncertain future? We will develop methods for modelling capacity, demand and interdependence in NI systems in a compatible way under a wide range of technological, socio-economic and climate futures. We will thereby provide the tools needed to identify robust strategies for sustainably balancing capacity and demand.2. What are the risks of infrastructure failure and how can we adapt NI to make it more resilient?We will analyse the risks of interdependent infrastructure failure by establishing network models of NI and analysing the consequences of failure for people and the economy. Information on key vulnerabilities and risks will be used to identify ways of adapting infrastructure systems to reduce risks in future.3. How do infrastructure systems evolve and interact with society and the economy? Starting with idealised simulations and working up to the national scale, we will develop new models of how infrastructure, society and the economy evolve in the long term. We will use the simulation models to demonstrate alternative long term futures for infrastructure provision and how they might be reached.4. What should the UK's strategy be for integrated provision of NI in the long term? Working with a remarkable group of project partners in government and industry, we will use our new methods to develop and test alternative strategies for Britain's NI, building an evidence-based case for a transition to sustainability. We will analyse the governance arrangements necessary to ensure that this transition is realisable in practice.A Programme Grant provides the opportunity to work flexibly with key partners in government and industry to address research challenges of national importance in a sustained way over five years. Our ambition is that through development of a new generation of tools, in concert with our government and industry partners, we will enable a revolution in the strategic analysis of NI provision in the UK, whilst at the same time becoming an international landmark programme recognised for novelty, research excellence and impact.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2011 - 2013Partners:Network Rail, University of Birmingham, BuroHappold (United Kingdom), Jacobs (United Kingdom), Network Rail +86 partnersNetwork Rail,University of Birmingham,BuroHappold (United Kingdom),Jacobs (United Kingdom),Network Rail,Humber Bridge Board,Geotechnical Asset Owners Forum,The University of Manchester,University of Nottingham,Cardiff University,Building Research Establishment,National Grid (United Kingdom),UNIVERSITY OF READING,WSP Civils (United Kingdom),University of Sheffield,Infrastructure UK,University of Oxford,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),ICE,Humber Bridge Board,UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE,Highways Agency,University of Surrey,CIRIA,Cardiff University,Parsons Brinckerhoff,Laing O'Rourke,Ramboll (United Kingdom),CARDIFF UNIVERSITY,NTU,University of Surrey,Newcastle University,Parsons Brinckerhoff,Atkins (United Kingdom),University of Edinburgh,Infrastructure and Project Authority,Building Research Establishment Ltd BRE,University of Warwick,University of Southampton,Gifford and Partners,University of Sheffield,University of Cambridge,University of Bristol,University of Reading,WELSH GOVERNMENT,Costain (United Kingdom),Loughborough University,Welsh Government,Newcastle University,University of Bristol,University of Bath,LONDON UNDERGROUND LIMITED,TRANSPORT FOR LONDON,COSTAIN LTD,Innovate UK,University of Warwick,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),National Grid PLC,Sir Robert McAlpine (United Kingdom),University of Salford,Welsh Government,Arup Group (United Kingdom),Vinci Construction UK Ltd,Transport Scotland,National Highways,Transport Scotland,UCL,WSP Civils,TRL,Construction Industry Research and Information Association,University of Southampton,Atkins UK,Arup Group Ltd,Halcrow Group Limited,Transport Research Laboratory (United Kingdom),University of Bath,Loughborough University,University of Manchester,Modern Built Environment,Arup Group,University of Cambridge,Hapold Consulting Ltd,Institution of Civil Engineers,Geotechnical Asset Owners Forum,Sir Robert McAlpine Ltd,Vinci plc,Laing O'Rourke plc,Imperial College London,University of Birmingham,TfL,Hapold Consulting LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/J004294/1Funder Contribution: 143,808 GBPThe economic and social well-being of society is dependent on the efficient performance of the nation's infrastructure which encompasses transport networks (roads, bridges, railways, tunnels, airports and canals), the energy sector (power stations, electricity and gas distribution networks), water supply and waste treatment facilities, buildings and also digital communications networks (telephone and internet). Much of this infrastructure is in a serious state of disrepair or reaching the end of its economic life (e.g. the first generation nuclear power stations) and governments have recognised the need for substantial investment to regenerate and expand the existing infrastructure as well as build new infrastructure to meet the challenges posed by increasing population and climate change. In addition to these requirements, a recent Infrastructure UK report suggests that the construction industry in the UK is less efficient and significantly more expensive than counterparts on the continent and overseas. It highlighted the need for a radical rethink of the entire industry which is often characterised as being 'old and slow' as opposed to the 'new and fast' technology sectors such as the aerospace and automobile industries. The fragmented nature of the overall supply chain, and the length of innovation cycle (20 years or more) have historically made industry transformation difficult to deliver. The industry also creates significant waste. Out of 420m tonnes of material consumed in the UK each year, an estimated 20% is thrown away. In 2008 the then Labour government set a series of challenging targets to improve sustainability in the construction sector. These include: (a) improve design; (b) promote innovation sustainability; (c) improve procurement and adopt whole life cycle principles; (d) increase training and reduce accidents; (e) achieve 50% reduction in construction waste to landfill by 2012; (f) reduce UK greenhouse gas emissions by at least 80% by 2050 and at least 34% by 2020 and (g) conserve water and enhance biodiversity on construction sites. Although some of these targets may be modified by the new government, it is likely that many will still be enforced and there remains a firm commitment to sustainable construction. On top of these targets, there is growing recognition that our infrastructure needs to be more resilient to the extremes of weather (such as floods and snow in the UK and hurricanes in Australia), and to the loads imposed by natural hazards such as earthquakes and tsunamis, as well as man-made events such as terrorist bombs and fires. All of these drivers serve to emphasise the importance of finding a mechanism to promote and implement the changes required. A 'business as usual' approach cannot be continued if these targets are to be achieved. The mission of the proposed Future Infrastructure Forum (FIF) is to generate a new vision of the shape of tomorrow's construction industry by providing a roadmap of research priorities in the ground and structural engineering sectors which will lead to firm proposals for innovative research aimed at revolutionizing how we procure, design and deliver major infrastructure projects. A key feature of this Forum is its broad membership which includes academics from over 20 of the top research Universities in the UK plus representatives from major consultants, contractors and industry and client organisations. In addition, a panel of experts from key international markets will be invited to participate and highlight the state-of-the-art and recent innovations across the globe. A core function will be to identify specific areas of focus and research projects which could be instigated immediately to precipitate this transformation. It will promote a total rethink of the fundamental approach to design, challenge established norms and stimulate innovation in construction.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2011 - 2016Partners:DEFRA, NWL, OS, Transport Scotland, E ON Central Networks plc +83 partnersDEFRA,NWL,OS,Transport Scotland,E ON Central Networks plc,Ordnance Survey,Transport Scotland,Costain (United Kingdom),Willis Towers Watson (United Kingdom),Department of Energy and Climate Change,BT Research,Local Government Improvement and Development,CABE,ENVIRONMENT AGENCY,Willis Limited,University of Oxford,Local Government Group,The Institution of Engineering and Tech,Association of North East Councils,Dept for Env Food & Rural Affairs DEFRA,Veolia Environmental Services,Infrastructure UK,Jeremy Benn Associates (United Kingdom),Institution of Mechanical Engineers,MWH (United Kingdom),Institution of Civil Engineers,Innovate UK,Scottish and Southern Energy SSE plc,Jacobs (United Kingdom),Association of North East Councils,BAM Nuttall Ltd,Royal Haskoning,National Highways,Network Rail,MET OFFICE,Met Office,Atkins Ltd,Yorkshire Water,National Grid (United Kingdom),UK Water Industry Research,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),Highways Agency,EA,Institution of Engineering and Technology,Black & Veatch (United Kingdom),Infrastructure and Project Authority,BAM Nuttall (United Kingdom),ICE,The Cabinet Office,Government of the United Kingdom,Swanbarton Limited,DECC,Northumbrian Water Group plc,Atkins UK,Town and Country Planning Association,Arup Group Ltd,Halcrow Group Limited,Swanbarton (United Kingdom),Communities and Local Government,UK Water Industry Research Ltd,Network Rail,Town & Country Planning ASS,Department for Transport,E.ON E&P UK Ltd,National Grid PLC,Design Council,Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government,Veolia Environmental Services,KTN - Energy Generation and Supply,BP (UK),United Utilities,Institution of Mechanical Engineers,Black & Veatch,BT Laboratories,United Utilities Water PLC,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),Parsons Brinckerhoff,COSTAIN LTD,MWH UK Ltd,Royal Haskoning,B P International Ltd,Kelda Group (United Kingdom),JBA Consulting,Parsons Brinckerhoff,DEFRA Environment, Food & Rural Affairs,DfT,Scottish and Southern Energy SSE plc,Arup Group (United Kingdom)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/I01344X/2Funder Contribution: 4,780,610 GBPNational infrastructure (NI) systems (energy, transport, water, waste and ICT) in the UK and in advanced economies globally face serious challenges. The 2009 Council for Science and Technology (CST) report on NI in the UK identified significant vulnerabilities, capacity limitations and a number of NI components nearing the end of their useful life. It also highlighted serious fragmentation in the arrangements for infrastructure provision in the UK. There is an urgent need to reduce carbon emissions from infrastructure, to respond to future demographic, social and lifestyle changes and to build resilience to intensifying impacts of climate change. If this process of transforming NI is to take place efficiently, whilst also minimising the associated risks, it will need to be underpinned by a long-term, cross-sectoral approach to understanding NI performance under a range of possible futures. The 'systems of systems' analysis that must form the basis for such a strategic approach does not yet exist - this inter-disciplinary research programme will provide it.The aim of the UK Infrastructure Transitions Research Consortium is to develop and demonstrate a new generation of system simulation models and tools to inform analysis, planning and design of NI. The research will deal with energy, transport, water, waste and ICT systems at a national scale, developing new methods for analysing their performance, risks and interdependencies. It will provide a virtual environment in which we will test strategies for long term investment in NI and understand how alternative strategies perform with respect to policy constraints such as reliability and security of supply, cost, carbon emissions, and adaptability to demographic and climate change.The research programme is structured around four major challenges:1. How can infrastructure capacity and demand be balanced in an uncertain future? We will develop methods for modelling capacity, demand and interdependence in NI systems in a compatible way under a wide range of technological, socio-economic and climate futures. We will thereby provide the tools needed to identify robust strategies for sustainably balancing capacity and demand.2. What are the risks of infrastructure failure and how can we adapt NI to make it more resilient?We will analyse the risks of interdependent infrastructure failure by establishing network models of NI and analysing the consequences of failure for people and the economy. Information on key vulnerabilities and risks will be used to identify ways of adapting infrastructure systems to reduce risks in future.3. How do infrastructure systems evolve and interact with society and the economy? Starting with idealised simulations and working up to the national scale, we will develop new models of how infrastructure, society and the economy evolve in the long term. We will use the simulation models to demonstrate alternative long term futures for infrastructure provision and how they might be reached.4. What should the UK's strategy be for integrated provision of NI in the long term? Working with a remarkable group of project partners in government and industry, we will use our new methods to develop and test alternative strategies for Britain's NI, building an evidence-based case for a transition to sustainability. We will analyse the governance arrangements necessary to ensure that this transition is realisable in practice.A Programme Grant provides the opportunity to work flexibly with key partners in government and industry to address research challenges of national importance in a sustained way over five years. Our ambition is that through development of a new generation of tools, in concert with our government and industry partners, we will enable a revolution in the strategic analysis of NI provision in the UK, whilst at the same time becoming an international landmark programme recognised for novelty, research excellence and impact.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2016 - 2021Partners:Future Cities Catapult, Volterra (United Kingdom), Broadband Stakeholder Group, Newcastle City Council, Infrastructure Ops Adaptation Forum +109 partnersFuture Cities Catapult,Volterra (United Kingdom),Broadband Stakeholder Group,Newcastle City Council,Infrastructure Ops Adaptation Forum,Department for Transport,Jacobs (United Kingdom),BP British Petroleum,SUEZ Recycling and Recovery UK Ltd,Committee on Climate Change,United Nations Office for Project Services,Environment Agency,DfT,Black & Veatch (United Kingdom),GTE Carbon,KPMG,Atkins (United Kingdom),INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS,ARCC,Analysys Mason (United Kingdom),Ofcom,JBA Trust,Black & Veatch,Northumbrian Water Group plc,Microsoft Research (United Kingdom),TfGM,Willis Group Ltd,Transport Systems Catapult,LR IMEA,Network Rail,JBA Trust,RWE Power International,European Investment Bank,RWE Power International,GTE Carbon,SITA UK,Acciona,Satellite Applications Catapult,National Grid PLC,SHELL RESEARCH B.V.,Institution of Mechanical Engineers,University of Oxford,CH2M Hill (United Kingdom),NWL,Arup Group (United Kingdom),Transport for Greater Manchester,UK Power Networks,Network Rail,Acciona,ENVIRONMENT AGENCY,KPMG (UK),GLA,CH2M HILL UNITED KINGDOM,TechUK,DEFRA,OS,United Nations Office for Project Servic,Mohammed Bin Rashid al Maktoum Foundatio,ICE,Newcastle City Council,Jeremy Benn Associates (United Kingdom),Institution of Civil Engineers,Arup Group,Analysys Mason Limited (UK),Improbable Worlds Ltd,TechUK,Willis Group Ltd,Future Cities Catapult (United Kingdom),Lloyd's Register,Infrastructure UK,Organisation For Economic Co-Operation and Development,Siemens plc (UK),BP (United States),Infrastructure and Project Authority,Satellite Applications Catapult,Energy Research Partnership,DECC,Costain (United Kingdom),Department of Energy and Climate Change,Mohammed Bin Rashid al Maktoum Foundatio,Ordnance Survey,Atkins UK,Arup Group Ltd,Broadband Stakeholder Group,UK Power Networks,Thames Water (United Kingdom),ARCC,OECD,MICROSOFT RESEARCH LIMITED,Transport Systems Catapult,TfL,KPMG (United Kingdom),Ofcom,CCC,OECD,VOLTERRA PARTNERS LLP,Institution of Mechanical Engineers,National Grid (United Kingdom),European Investment Bank,The Core Cities group,NEWCASTLE CITY COUNCIL,Improbable Worlds Ltd,Lloyd's Register Foundation,Energy Research Partnership ERP,Zurich Global Corporate UK,Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy,Greater London Authority (GLA),EA,TRANSPORT FOR LONDON,The Core Cities group,COSTAIN LTD,SIEMENS PLC,Thames Water (United Kingdom),Shell (Netherlands)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/N017064/1Funder Contribution: 5,387,530 GBPNational infrastructure provides essential services to a modern economy: energy, transport, digital communications, water supply, flood protection, and waste water / solid waste collection, treatment and disposal. The OECD estimates that globally US$53 trillion of infrastructure investment will be needed by 2030. The UK's National Infrastructure Plan set out over £460 billion of investment in the next decade, but is not yet known what effect that investment will have on the quality and reliability of national infrastructure services, the size of the economy, the resilience of society or its impacts upon the environment. Such a gap in knowledge exists because of the sheer complexity of infrastructure networks and their interactions with people and the environment. That means that there is too much guesswork, and too many untested assumptions in the planning, appraisal and design of infrastructure, from European energy networks to local drainage systems. Our vision is for infrastructure decisions to be guided by systems analysis. When this vision is realised, decision makers will have access to, and visualisation of, information that tells them how all infrastructure systems are performing. They will have models that help to pinpoint vulnerabilities and quantify the risks of failure. They will be able to perform 'what-if' analysis of proposed investments and explore the effects of future uncertainties, such as population growth, new technologies and climate change. The UK Infrastructure Transitions Research Consortium (ITRC) is a consortium of seven UK universities, led by the University of Oxford, which has developed unique capability in infrastructure systems analysis, modelling and decision making. Thanks to an EPSRC Programme Grant (2011-2015) the ITRC has developed and demonstrated the world's first family of national infrastructure system models (NISMOD) for analysis and long-term planning of interdependent infrastructure systems. The research is already being used by utility companies, engineering consultants, the Institution of Civil Engineers and many parts of the UK government, to analyse risks and inform billions of pounds worth of better infrastructure decisions. Infrastructure UK is now using NISMOD to analyse the National Infrastructure Plan. The aim of MISTRAL is to develop and demonstrate a highly integrated analytics capability to inform strategic infrastructure decision making across scales, from local to global. MISTRAL will thereby radically extend infrastructure systems analysis capability: - Downscale: from ITRC's pioneering representation of national networks to the UK's 25.7 million households and 5.2 million businesses, representing the infrastructure services they demand and the multi-scale networks through which these services are delivered. - Upscale: from the national perspective to incorporate global interconnections via telecommunications, transport and energy networks. - Across-scale: to other national settings outside the UK, where infrastructure needs are greatest and where systems analysis represents a huge business opportunity for UK engineering firms. These research challenges urgently need to be tackled because infrastructure systems are interconnected across scales and prolific technological innovation is now occurring that will exploit, or may threaten, that interconnectedness. MISTRAL will push the frontiers of system research in order to quantify these opportunities and risks, providing the evidence needed to plan, invest in and design modern, sustainable and resilient infrastructure services. Five years ago, proposing theory, methodology and network models that stretched from the household to the globe, and from the UK to different national contexts would not have been credible. Now the opportunity for multi-scale modelling is coming into sight, and ITRC, perhaps uniquely, has the capacity and ambition to take on that challenge in the MISTRAL programme.
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