
Hydrason Solutions Limited
Hydrason Solutions Limited
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2019 - 2028Partners:Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult, University of Bremen, Heriot-Watt University, Tharsus, SCR +80 partnersOffshore Renewable Energy Catapult,University of Bremen,Heriot-Watt University,Tharsus,SCR,Hydrason Solutions Limited,General Dynamics UK Ltd,UKAEA,Digital Health and Care Institute,Queensland University of Technology,United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority,BALFOUR BEATTY RAIL,Autonomous Surface Vehicles Ltd (ASV),UMD,The Data Lab,Frazer-Nash Consultancy Ltd,FBM Babcock Marine Ltd,Historic Environment Scotland,ABB Ltd,Fudan University,TechnipFMC (International),BALFOUR BEATTY PLC,SICSA,BAE Systems (United Kingdom),Bae Systems Defence Ltd,USYD,Fudan University,Royal Bank of Scotland Plc,SELEX Sensors & Airborne Systems Ltd,Italian Institute of Technology,Mactaggart Scott & Co Ltd,Narec Capital Limited,Leonardo (UK),FBM Babcock Marine Ltd,Dyson Appliances Ltd,Total E&P UK PLC,CAS,Mactaggart Scott & Co Ltd,Leonardo,Dimensional Imaging Ltd,BAE Systems (Sweden),Five AI Limited,KUKA Robotics UK Limited,Autonomous Surface Vehicles Ltd (ASV),QUT,The Data Lab,The Shadow Robot Company,BAE Systems (UK),Codeplay Software Ltd,SeeByte Ltd,S M C Pneumatics (U K) Ltd,Codeplay Software,Digital Health and Care Institute,PAL Robotics,ABB Group,S M C Pneumatics (U K) Ltd,University of Maryland,Schlumberger Cambridge Research Limited,Dyson Limited,Heriot-Watt University,Hydrason Solutions Limited,Italian Institute of Technology,EURATOM/CCFE,SICSA,DI4D,Shadow Robot Company Ltd,Chinese Academy of Science,Royal IHC (UK),Kuka Ltd,Five AI Limited,Total E&P UK PLC,ABB (Switzerland),RASA Technologies GmbH,KUKA Robotics UK Limited,Historic Environment Scotland,Chitendai,OFFSHORE RENEWABLE ENERGY CATAPULT,Chitendai,Balfour Beatty (United Kingdom),Tharsus,Royal Bank of Scotland Plc,Royal IHC (UK),TechnipFMC (International),Chinese Academy of Sciences,SBTFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/S023208/1Funder Contribution: 7,174,730 GBPRobots and autonomous systems (RAS) will revolutionise the world's economy and society for the foreseeable future, working for us, beside us and interacting with us. The UK urgently needs graduates with the technical skills and industry awareness to create an innovation pipeline from academic research to global markets. Key application areas include manufacturing, construction, transport, offshore energy, defence, and health and well-being. The recent Industrial Strategy Review set out four Grand Challenges that address the potential impact of RAS on the economy and society at large. Meeting these challenges requires the next generation of graduates to be trained in key enabling techniques and underpinning theories in RAS and AI and be able to work effectively in cross-disciplinary projects. The proposed overarching theme of the CDT-RAS can be characterised as 'safe interactions'. Firstly, robots must safely interact physically with environments, requiring compliant manipulation, active sensing, world modelling and planning. Secondly, robots must interact safely with people either in face-to-face natural dialogue or through advanced, multimodal interfaces. Thirdly, key to safe interactions is the ability for introspective condition monitoring, prognostics and health management. Finally, success in all these interactions depends on foundational interaction enablers such as techniques for vision and machine learning. The Edinburgh Centre for Robotics (ECR) combines Heriot-Watt University and the University of Edinburgh and has shown to be an effective venue for a CDT. ECR combines internationally leading science with an outstanding track record of exploitation, and world class infrastructure with approximately £100M in investment from government and industry including the National ROBOTARIUM. A critical mass of over 50 experienced supervisors cover the underpinning disciplines crucial to RAS safe interaction. With regards facilities, ECR is transformational in the range of robots and spaces that can be experimentally configured to study both the physical interaction through robot embodiment, as well as, in-field remote operations and human-robot teaming. This, combined with supportive staff and access to Project Partners, provides an integrated capability unique in the world for exploring collaborative interaction between humans, robots and their environments. The reputation of ECR is evidenced by the additional support garnered from 31 industry Project Partners, providing an additional 23 studentships and overall additional support of approximately £11M. The CDT-RAS training programme will align with and further develop the highly successful, well-established CDT-RAS four-year PhD programme, with taught courses on the underpinning theory and state of the art and research training, closely linked to career relevant skills in creativity, RI and innovation. The CDT-RAS will provide cohort-based training with three graduate hallmarks: i) advanced technical training with ii) a foundation international experience, and iii) innovation training. Students will develop an assessed learning portfolio, tailored to individual interests and needs, with access to industry and end-users as required. Recruitment efforts will focus on attracting cohorts of diverse, high calibre students, who have the hunger to learn. The single-city location of Edinburgh enables stimulating, cohort-wide activities that build commercial awareness, cross-disciplinary teamwork, public outreach, and ethical understanding, so that Centre graduates will be equipped to guide and benefit from the disruptions in technology and commerce. Our vision for the CDT-RAS is to build on the current success and ensure the CDT-RAS continues to be a major international force that can make a generational leap in the training of innovation-ready postgraduates, who will lead in the safe deployment of robotic and autonomous systems in the real world.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2017 - 2022Partners:Tharsus, Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult, Heriot-Watt University, SCR, Hydrason Solutions Limited +62 partnersTharsus,Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult,Heriot-Watt University,SCR,Hydrason Solutions Limited,General Dynamics UK Ltd,CENSIS,The Underwater Centre (UK),Tenaris,SCHUNK Intec Limited (UK),Sprint Robotics,PERMASTORE LIMITED,The Data Lab,LR IMEA,SgurrEnergy Ltd,British Petroleum International Limited,British Petroleum International Limited,Scottish Enterprise,Tenaris (International),Permasense Limited,Autonomous Surface Vehicles Ltd (ASV),KUKA Robotics UK Limited,Subsea UK,Itf, The Industry Technology,Autonomous Surface Vehicles Ltd (ASV),The Underwater Centre (UK),Baker Hughes Ltd,Guided Ultrasonics Ltd,TechnipFMC (International),OGTC (formerly Oil and Gas Tech Centre),Guided Ultrasonics Ltd,Baker Hughes (Europe) Ltd,Scottish Enterprise,ABB Group (International),The Oil and Gas Technology Centre Ltd,Narec Capital Limited,Total E&P UK PLC,Subsea 7 Limited,Lloyd's Register Foundation,The Data Lab,Lloyd's Register EMEA,CENSIS,SgurrEnergy,Chevron North Sea Limited,Itf, The Industry Technology,Lloyd's Register Foundation,CHEVRON NORTH SEA LIMITED,SeeByte Ltd,OGIC (Oil and Gas Innovation Centre),ABB Group,SCHUNK Intec Limited (UK),Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd (Global),Subsea UK,Schlumberger Cambridge Research Limited,Subsea 7 Limited,Heriot-Watt University,Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd (Global),OFFSHORE RENEWABLE ENERGY CATAPULT,Tharsus,TechnipFMC (International),SBT,Hydrason Solutions Limited,Kuka Ltd,Total E&P UK PLC,ABB (Switzerland),KUKA Robotics UK Limited,Sprint RoboticsFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/R026173/1Funder Contribution: 15,223,200 GBPThe international offshore energy industry currently faces the triple challenges of an oil price expected to remain less than $50 a barrel, significant expensive decommissioning commitments of old infrastructure (especially North Sea) and small margins on the traded commodity price per KWh of offshore renewable energy. Further, the offshore workforce is ageing as new generations of suitable graduates prefer not to work in hazardous places offshore. Operators therefore seek more cost effective, safe methods and business models for inspection, repair and maintenance of their topside and marine offshore infrastructure. Robotics and artificial intelligence are seen as key enablers in this regard as fewer staff offshore reduces cost, increases safety and workplace appeal. The long-term industry vision is thus for a completely autonomous offshore energy field, operated, inspected and maintained from the shore. The time is now right to further develop, integrate and de-risk these into certifiable evaluation prototypes because there is a pressing need to keep UK offshore oil and renewable energy fields economic, and to develop more productive and agile products and services that UK startups, SMEs and the supply chain can export internationally. This will maintain a key economic sector currently worth £40 billion and 440,000 jobs to the UK economy, and a supply chain adding a further £6 billion in exports of goods and services. The ORCA Hub is an ambitious initiative that brings together internationally leading experts from 5 UK universities with over 30 industry partners (>£17.5M investment). Led by the Edinburgh Centre of Robotics (HWU/UoE), in collaboration with Imperial College, Oxford and Liverpool Universities, this multi-disciplinary consortium brings its unique expertise in: Subsea (HWU), Ground (UoE, Oxf) and Aerial robotics (ICL); as well as human-machine interaction (HWU, UoE), innovative sensors for Non Destructive Evaluation and low-cost sensor networks (ICL, UoE); and asset management and certification (HWU, UoE, LIV). The Hub will provide game-changing, remote solutions using robotics and AI that are readily integratable with existing and future assets and sensors, and that can operate and interact safely in autonomous or semi-autonomous modes in complex and cluttered environments. We will develop robotics solutions enabling accurate mapping of, navigation around and interaction with offshore assets that support the deployment of sensors networks for asset monitoring. Human-machine systems will be able to co-operate with remotely located human operators through an intelligent interface that manages the cognitive load of users in these complex, high-risk situations. Robots and sensors will be integrated into a broad asset integrity information and planning platform that supports self-certification of the assets and robots.
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