
RITICS
RITICS
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2028Partners:Scottish Power Retail, Equiwatt Limited, Ofgem, Kinewell Energy, Toshiba Europe Limited +32 partnersScottish Power Retail,Equiwatt Limited,Ofgem,Kinewell Energy,Toshiba Europe Limited,Eskimo Products Ltd,Siemens plc (UK),Kwame Nkrumah Uni of Science & Tech,Northern Gas Networks,Northern Powergrid,Singapore University of Tech & Design,Wales & West Utilities,Dept for Energy Security & Net Zero,National Grid plc,UNiLAB,KrakenFlex Ltd,Department for the Economy (NI),UCC,The Climate Change Committe,LV= (Liverpool Victoria),Electricity North West,Electricity Maps,National Grid ESO,Neath Port Talbot County,Newcastle University,Association for Decentralised Energy,University of Bath,Compound Semiconductor App. Catapult,Jacobs (UK),Tyndall National Institute (TNI),IGEM (Inst of Gas Engineers & Managers),NATIONAL ENERGY ACTION,WELSH GOVERNMENT,AFRY (AF Poyry) (UK),RITICS,Aura Power,University of SussexFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y016114/2Funder Contribution: 4,469,780 GBPThe global energy sector is facing considerable pressure arising from climate change, depletion of fossil fuels and geopolitical issues around the location of remaining fossil fuel reserves. Energy networks are vitally important enablers for the UK energy sector and therefore UK industry and society. Energy networks exist primarily to exploit and facilitate temporal and spatial diversity in energy production and use and to exploit economies of scale where they exist. The pursuit of Net Zero presents many complex interconnected challenges which reach beyond the UK and have huge relevance internationally. These challenges vary considerably from region to region due to historical, geographic, political, economic and cultural reasons. As technology and society changes so do these challenges, and therefore the planning, design and operation of energy networks needs to be revisited and optimised. Electricity systems are facing technical issues of bi-directional power flows, increasing long-distance power flows and a growing contribution from fluctuating and low inertia generation sources. Gas systems require significant innovation to remain relevant in a low carbon future. Heat networks have little energy demand market share, although they have been successfully installed in other northern European countries. Other energy vectors such as Hydrogen or bio-methane show great promise but as yet have no significant share of the market. Faced with these pressures, the modernisation of energy networks technology, processes and governance is a necessity if they are to be fit for the future. Good progress has been made in de-carbonisation in some areas but this has not been fast enough, widespread enough across vectors or sectors and not enough of the innovation is being deployed at scale. Effort is required to accelerate the development, scale up the deployment and increase the impact delivered.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2023 - 2024Partners:NATIONAL ENERGY ACTION, Eskimo Products Ltd, Aura Power, Singapore University of Tech & Design, National Energy Action +37 partnersNATIONAL ENERGY ACTION,Eskimo Products Ltd,Aura Power,Singapore University of Tech & Design,National Energy Action,Siemens plc (UK),IGEM (Inst of Gas Engineers & Managers),University of Bristol,RITICS,Electricity Maps,Scottish Power Retail,Welsh Government,KrakenFlex Ltd,WELSH GOVERNMENT,Tyndall National Institute (TNI),Association for Decentralised Energy,Assoc for Conservation of Energy (ACE),UCC,Kinewell Energy,Neath Port Talbot County,Northern Powergrid,Department for the Economy (NI),Jacobs (UK),Dept for Energy Security & Net Zero,University of Sussex,National Grid plc,Equiwatt Limited,Toshiba Europe Limited,Ofgem,Wales & West Utilities,The Climate Change Committe,AFRY (AF Poyry) (UK),LV= (Liverpool Victoria),Halcrow Group Ltd,Compound Semiconductor App. Catapult,Newcastle University,Scottish Power (United Kingdom),Electricity North West,National Grid ESO,UNiLAB,Kwame Nkrumah Uni of Science & Tech,Northern Gas NetworksFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/Y016114/1Funder Contribution: 5,334,580 GBPThe global energy sector is facing considerable pressure arising from climate change, depletion of fossil fuels and geopolitical issues around the location of remaining fossil fuel reserves. Energy networks are vitally important enablers for the UK energy sector and therefore UK industry and society. Energy networks exist primarily to exploit and facilitate temporal and spatial diversity in energy production and use and to exploit economies of scale where they exist. The pursuit of Net Zero presents many complex interconnected challenges which reach beyond the UK and have huge relevance internationally. These challenges vary considerably from region to region due to historical, geographic, political, economic and cultural reasons. As technology and society changes so do these challenges, and therefore the planning, design and operation of energy networks needs to be revisited and optimised. Electricity systems are facing technical issues of bi-directional power flows, increasing long-distance power flows and a growing contribution from fluctuating and low inertia generation sources. Gas systems require significant innovation to remain relevant in a low carbon future. Heat networks have little energy demand market share, although they have been successfully installed in other northern European countries. Other energy vectors such as Hydrogen or bio-methane show great promise but as yet have no significant share of the market. Faced with these pressures, the modernisation of energy networks technology, processes and governance is a necessity if they are to be fit for the future. Good progress has been made in de-carbonisation in some areas but this has not been fast enough, widespread enough across vectors or sectors and not enough of the innovation is being deployed at scale. Effort is required to accelerate the development, scale up the deployment and increase the impact delivered.
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