
Tata Steel
Tata Steel
4 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2024Partners:University of Warwick, FeTu Ltd, CFMS Services Ltd, NEPIC, CRODA EUROPE LTD +97 partnersUniversity of Warwick,FeTu Ltd,CFMS Services Ltd,NEPIC,CRODA EUROPE LTD,EDGE Digital Manufacturing Limited,Industry Wales,Hartree Centre,University of Sheffield,Henry Royce Institute,Liberty Speciality Steels,VESUVIUS UK LTD,Mineral Products Association,Union Papertech Ltd,Tata Steel UK,University of Liverpool,Goodwin Steel Castings,Digital Catapult,EDGE Digital Manufacturing Limited,North East Process Industry ClusterNEPIC,Knowledge Centre for Materials Chemistry,N8 Research Partnership,Industry Wales,AkzoNobel,Glass Futures Ltd,Johnson Matthey Plc,British Ceramic Confederation,Union Papertech Ltd,North East Process Industry ClusterNEPIC,AkzoNobel UK,Northumbria University,British Ceramic Confederation,Building Research Establishment,Sheffield Hallam University,AkzoNobel UK,University of Sheffield,British Glass,Aluminium Federation Ltd,British Steel Ltd,Goodwin Steel Castings,North West Business Leadership Team,Sheffield Forgemasters Engineering Ltd,Johnson Matthey,Celsa Steel UK,BRE,IOM3,Henry Royce Institute,N8 Research Partnership,FeTu Ltd,Confederation of Paper Industries,Lucideon Ltd,University of Liverpool,Confederation of Paper Industries,University of Warwick,James Cropper Plc,Vesuvius UK,British Glass,British Coatings Federation,Policy Connect,Tata Steel,Imerys,Knowledge Centre for Materials Chemistry,Materials Processing Institute (MPI),Liberty Steel UK,Ferroday Ltd,British Glass,UK Steel,British Coatings Federation,Hartree Centre,[no title available],IoM3,Breedon Cement Ltd,Aluminium Federation Ltd,Northumbria University,Imerys,Mineral Products Association,Glass Futures Ltd,James Cropper Plc,CRODA EUROPE LIMITED,Johnson Matthey plc,UK Steel,Connected Digital Economy Catapult,Tata Steel (United Kingdom),Croda (United Kingdom),Building Research Establishment (BRE),Ferroday Ltd,Celsa Steel UK,CERAM Research,PYROPTIK INSTRUMENTS LIMITED,North West Business Leadership Team,LKAB Minerals Ltd,CFMS Services Ltd,Policy Connect,Sheffield Forgemasters Engineering Ltd,LKAB Minerals Ltd,Breedon Cement Ltd,Science and Technology Facilities Council,PYROPTIK INSTRUMENTS LIMITED,Materials Processing Institute (MPI),CFMS Ltd,SHU,British Steel LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V026402/1Funder Contribution: 2,259,080 GBPThe UK Foundation Industries (Glass, Metals, Cement, Ceramics, Bulk Chemicals and Paper), are worth £52B to the UK economy, produce 28 million tonnes of materials per year and account for 10% of the UK total CO2 emissions. These industries face major challenges in meeting the UK Government's legal commitment for 2050 to reduce net greenhouse gas emissions by 100% relative to 1990, as they are characterised by highly intensive use of both resources and energy. While all sectors are implementing steps to increase recycling and reuse of materials, they are at varying stages of creating road maps to zero carbon. These roadmaps depend on the switching of the national grid to low carbon energy supply based on green electricity and sustainable sources of hydrogen and biofuels along with carbon capture and storage solutions. Achievement of net zero carbon will also require innovations in product and process design and the adoption of circular economy and industrial symbiosis approaches via new business models, enabled as necessary by changes in national and global policies. Additionally, the Governments £4.7B National Productivity Investment Fund recognises the need for raising UK productivity across all industrial sectors to match best international standards. High levels of productivity coupled with low carbon strategies will contribute to creating a transformation of the foundation industry landscape, encouraging strategic retention of the industries in the UK, resilience against global supply chain shocks such as Covid-19 and providing quality jobs and a clean environment. The strategic importance of these industries to UK productivity and environmental targets has been acknowledged by the provision of £66M from the Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund to support a Transforming Foundation Industries cluster. Recognising that the individual sectors will face many common problems and opportunities, the TFI cluster will serve to encourage and facilitate a cross sectoral approach to the major challenges faced. As part of this funding an Academic Network Plus will be formed, to ensure the establishment of a vibrant community of academics and industry that can organise and collaborate to build disciplinary and interdisciplinary solutions to the major challenges. The Network Plus will serve as a basis to ensure that the ongoing £66M TFI programme is rolled out, underpinned by a portfolio of the best available UK interdisciplinary science, and informed by cross sectoral industry participation. Our network, initially drawn from eight UK universities, and over 30 industrial organisations will support the UK foundation industries by engaging with academia, industry, policy makers and non-governmental organisations to identify and address challenges and opportunities to co-develop and adopt transformative technologies, business models and working practices. Our expertise covers all six foundation industries, with relevant knowledge of materials, engineering, bulk chemicals, manufacturing, physical sciences, informatics, economics, circular economy and the arts & humanities. Through our programme of mini-projects, workshops, knowledge transfer, outreach and dissemination, the Network will test concepts and guide the development of innovative outcomes to help transform UK foundation industries. The Network will be inclusive across disciplines, embracing best practice in Knowledge Exchange from the Arts and Humanities, and inclusive of the whole UK academic and industrial communities, enabling access for all to the activity programme and project fund opportunities.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2011 - 2012Partners:Tata Steel (United Kingdom), Siemens VAI, The University of Manchester, TISCO, University of Manchester +5 partnersTata Steel (United Kingdom),Siemens VAI,The University of Manchester,TISCO,University of Manchester,University of Salford,Tata Steel,Tata Steel (United Kingdom),Tata Group UK,SIEMENS PLCFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/J50080X/1Funder Contribution: 87,508 GBPDuring hot-rolling, the steel industry has no means of determining microstructure development in real-time. Offline analysis of coil-end samples is slow, destructive and does not allow monitoring and control of material properties throughout a production run. Research at the University of Manchester has resulted in the development of a new non-contact system (ROMA), exploiting a novel multi-frequency electromagnetic technique to monitor material microstructure during forced cooling. An important benefit is that it can measure from 0-100% transformation. This collaboration will transfer knowledge to Siemens and enable commercial exploitation by reference-site installation on the Tata Steel hot-strip mill at Port Talbot.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2024Partners:China Huaneng Group, Integrated Environmental Solutions Ltd, The Manufacturing Technology Centre Ltd, Calgavin Ltd (Birmingham), CERES POWER LIMITED +169 partnersChina Huaneng Group,Integrated Environmental Solutions Ltd,The Manufacturing Technology Centre Ltd,Calgavin Ltd (Birmingham),CERES POWER LIMITED,University of Oxford,Peel L&P Environmental Limited,Siemens plc (UK),Doosan Babcock Power Systems,Pale Blue Dot,Glass Futures Ltd,VALE EUROPE LIMITED,Air Products (United Kingdom),Element Energy Ltd,North West Hydrogen Alliance,Diageo Great Britain Limited,UK-CPI,Scottish Power Energy Networks Holdings Limited,Diageo Great Britain Limited,Princes Foods,Heriot-Watt University,IBioIC (Industrial Biotech Innov Ctr),BITC,Wood plc,Air Products (United States),Petroineos Manufacturing Scotland Ltd,Tata Steel,Optimat,Air Products & Chemicals Plc,Heriot-Watt University,Membranology,Optimat,Engineering Construction,Vale Europe Limited,Engineering Construction,Decarbonised Gas Alliance (DGA),DCWW,Statoil Petroleum ASA,OFFSHORE RENEWABLE ENERGY CATAPULT,Committee on Climate Change,Scottish Hydrogen & Fuel Cell Asso SHFCA,Future South,CR Plus Ltd,China Huaneng Group,NECCUS,Scottish and Southern Energy SSE plc,SP Energy Networks,North East Process Industry ClusterNEPIC,Liberty Steel UK,NSG Group (UK),Welsh Water (Dwr Cymru),Tyseley Energy Park Limited,NSG Holding (Europe) Limited,INEOS Technologies UK,MTC,Equinor,Sembcorp Energy UK Limited,Humber Local Enterprise Partnership(LEP),Uniper Technologies Ltd.,Department for the Economy (NI),Energy Technology Partnership,Progressive Energy Limited,Dwr Cymru Welsh Water (United Kingdom),Tata Steel UK,Northern Gas Networks,Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult,OIL AND GAS AUTHORITY,Highview Power Storage (United Kingdom),Element Energy Ltd,Northern Powergrid,Johnson Matthey,Centrica Storage Limited,Scottish and Southern Energy,Food and Drink Federation,Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Inno,Tees Valley Mayoral Combined Authority,ITM POWER PLC,Confederation of Paper Industries,Henry Royce Institute,Future Towns Innovation Hub,Doosan (United Kingdom),North West Hydrogen Alliance,Aurelia Turbines Oy,Celsa Steel UK,Petroineos Manufacturing Scotland Ltd,RFC Power,CCC,DRAX POWER LIMITED,Narec Capital Limited,Johnson Matthey plc,Innovatium Group Limited,Chemical Industries Association Ltd,Scottish Hydrogen& Fuel Cell Association,PROGRESSIVE ENERGY LIMITED,Aker Solutions,Equinor,Ineos,RFC Power,John Wood Group plc,Scottish and Southern Energy SSE plc,UK-CPI (dup'e),JJ Bioenergy Ltd,IES,UK Petroleum Industry Association Ltd,Future Towns Innovation Hub,UnitBirwelco Ltd,UK Steel,ITM Power plc,Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Inno,ITM Power,Chemical Industries Association Ltd,Low Emissions Resources Global, Ltd,IBioIC (Industrial Biotech Innov Ctr),JJ Bioenergy Ltd,SIEMENS PLC,SEPA,NEPIC,Bellona Foundation,Innovatium Group Limited,Ceres Power Ltd,Black Country LEP,North West Business Leadership Team,VPI Immingham,Glass Futures Ltd,Tyseley Energy Park Limited,Pale Blue Dot,UK Petroleum Industry Association Ltd,CR Plus Ltd,North West Business Leadership Team,Low Emissions Resources Global, Ltd,VPI Immingham,Tata Steel (United Kingdom),Drochaid Research Services Limited,OGTC (formerly Oil and Gas Tech Centre),Doosan Power Systems,Tees Valley Combined Authority,Black Country LEP,Johnson Matthey Plc,Sembcorp Energy UK Limited,Calgavin Ltd (Birmingham),National Engineering Laboratory,Confederation of Paper Industries,Department for the Economy (NI),Peel L&P Environmental Limited,Vale Europe Ltd,North East Process Industry ClusterNEPIC,Centrica Storage Limited,Quantum ES,Business in the Community,Energy Technology Partnership,UnitBirwelco Ltd,The Oil and Gas Technology Centre Ltd,Food & Drink Federation,Princes Foods,Uniper Technologies Ltd.,Membranology,SCOTTISH ENVIRONMENT PROTECTION AGENCY,UK Steel,NECCUS,Humber Local Enterprise Partnership(LEP),Quantum ES,Aurelia Turbines Oy,Future South,Drochaid Research Services Limited,Celsa Steel UK,Drax Power Limited,Highview Power Storage,Northern Powergrid (United Kingdom),Bellona Foundation (International),Air Products (United Kingdom),National Engineering Laboratory,Aker Solutions,Henry Royce Institute,Liberty Speciality SteelsFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V027050/1Funder Contribution: 19,903,400 GBPThe decarbonisation of industrial clusters is of critical importance to the UK's ambitions of cutting greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050. The UK Industrial Decarbonisation Challenge (IDC) of the Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund (ISCF) aims to establish the world's first net-zero carbon industrial cluster by 2040 and at least one low-carbon cluster by 2030. The Industrial Decarbonisation Research and Innovation Centre (IDRIC) has been formed to support this Challenge through funding a multidisciplinary research and innovation centre, which currently does not exist at the scale, to accelerate decarbonisation of industrial clusters. IDRIC works with academia, industry, government and other stakeholders to deliver the multidisciplinary research and innovation agenda needed to decarbonise the UK's industrial clusters. IDRIC's research and innovation programme is delivered through a range of activities that enable industry-led, multidisciplinary research in cross-cutting areas of technology, policy, economics and regulation. IDRIC connects and empowers the UK industrial decarbonisation community to deliver an impactful innovation hub for industrial decarbonisation. The establishment of IDRIC as the "one stop shop" for research and innovation, as well as knowledge exchange, regulation, policy and key skills will be beneficial across the industry sectors and clusters. In summary, IDRIC will connect stakeholders, inspire and deliver innovation and maximise impact to help the UK industrial clusters to grow our existing energy intensive industrial sectors, and to attract new, advanced manufacturing industries of the future.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2025Partners:Materials Processing Institute (MPI), Recycling Lives, The Manufacturing Technology Centre Ltd, Chinalco Materials Application Research, Oakdene Hollins (United Kingdom) +54 partnersMaterials Processing Institute (MPI),Recycling Lives,The Manufacturing Technology Centre Ltd,Chinalco Materials Application Research,Oakdene Hollins (United Kingdom),Constellium,MTC,British Steel Ltd,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,WRAP,Recycling Lives,Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL,CROWN Technology,GKN Aerospace Services Ltd,Tata Steel UK,GKN Aerospace Services Ltd,DSTL,Tata Steel Europe,Aeromet International PLC,KTN,MQP Limited,Aluminium Federation Ltd,Pinsent Masons LLP,British Steel Ltd,Metal Packaging Manufacturers Associatio,Brunel University,Tata Steel,Coca-Cola European Partners,Coca-Cola European Partners,Metal Packaging Manufacturers Associatio,INNOVAL,CROWN Technology,Supply Dynamics,WRAP (Waste and Resources Action Prog),Liberty Steel UK,Pinsent Masons LLP,GEFCO,Tata Steel (United Kingdom),Aluminium Federation Ltd,Aeromet International Ltd,Chinalco Materials Application Research,UK Metals Council,Tata Steel (UK),Brunel University London,Circular Economy Club,Giraffe Innovation Ltd,MQP Limited,Materials Processing Institute (MPI),Giraffe Innovation Ltd,SJTU,Constellium,UK Metals Council,Innoval Technology Ltd,KTN,Circular Economy Hub,GEFCO UK Ltd,Liberty Speciality Steels,Oakdene Hollins Ltd,Supply DynamicsFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/V011804/1Funder Contribution: 4,437,440 GBPHistorically, the discovery, development and application of metals have set the pace for the evolution of human civilisation, driven the way that people live, and shaped our modern societies. Today, metals are the backbone of the global manufacturing industry and the fuel for economic growth. In the UK, the metals industry comprises 11,100 companies, employs 230,000 people, directly contributes £10.7bn to the UK GDP, and indirectly supports a further 750,000 employees and underpins some £200bn of UK GDP. As a foundation industry, it underpins the competitive position of every industrial sector, including aerospace, automotive, construction, electronics, defence and general engineering. However, extraction and processing of metals are very energy intensive and cause severe environmental damage: the extraction of seven major metals (Fe, Al, Cu, Pb, Mn, Ni and Zn) accounts for 15% of the global primary energy demand and 12% of the global GHG emission. In addition, metals can in theory be recycled infinitely without degradation, saving enormous amounts of energy and CO2 emission. For instance, compared with the extraction route, recycling of steel saves 85% of energy, 86% GHG emission, 40% water consumption and 76% water pollution. Moreover, metals are closely associated with resource scarcity and supply security, and this is particularly true for the UK, which relies almost 100% on the import of metals. The grand challenge facing the entire world is decoupling economic growth from environmental damage, in which metals have a critical role to play. Our vision is full metal circulation, in which the global demand for metallic materials will be met by the circulation of secondary metals through reduce, reuse, remanufacture (including repair and cascade), recycling and recovery. Full metal circulation represents a paradigm shift for metallurgical science, manufacturing technology and the industrial landscape, and more importantly will change completely the way we use natural resources. Full metal circulation means no more mining, no more metal extraction, and no more primary metals. We will make the best use of the metals that we already have. We propose to establish an Interdisciplinary Circular Economy Centre, CircularMetal, to accelerate the transition from the current largely take-make-waste linear economy to full metal circulation. Our ambition is to make the UK the first country to realise full metal circulation (at least for the high-volume metals) by 2050. This will form an integral part of the government's efforts to double resource productivity and realise Net Zero by 2050. We have assembled a truly interdisciplinary academic team with a wide range of academic expertise, and a strong industrial consortium involving the full metals supply chain with a high level of financial support. We will conduct macro-economic analysis of metal flow to identify circularity gaps in the metals industry and to develop pathways, policies and regulations to bridge them; we will develop circular product design principles, circular business models and circular supply chain strategies to facilitate the transition to full metal circulation; we will develop circular alloys and circular manufacturing technologies to enable the transition to full metal circulation; and we will engage actively with the wider academic and industrial communities, policy makers and the general public to deliver the widest possible impact of full metal circulation. The CircularMetal centre will provide the capability and pathways to eliminate the need for metal extraction, and the estimated accumulative economic contribution to the UK could be over £100bn in the next 10 years.
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