The Landscape and Roadmap of the Research and Innovation Infrastructures in Energy: A Review of the Case Study of the UK
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Overview and Project Scope
2. Methodology
2.1. First Phase
2.1.1. UKRI Survey
2.1.2. Interviews
- What the current RII are (both in the UK and abroad);
- Who the stakeholders are;
- What the risks/mitigating mechanisms are.
2.1.3. Expert Elicitation Workshops
2.1.4. Review of the Literature
- RCUK Energy programme Strategy Fellowship reports [12];
- UKERC Landscape reports in energy;
- HM Government report on the nuclear research landscape [13];
- Energy System Catapult report on the energy sector research facilities and demonstrators [14];
- EPSRC report on the Scale and Scope of Academic energy research in the UK [15].
2.2. Second Phase
2.2.1. Interviews
- What the future research challenges are;
- What future RII needs might be (including who might build/operate them);
- Who the stakeholders are;
- What the risks/mitigating mechanisms are.
2.2.2. Workshops
3. Current Landscape of Research and Innovation Infrastructure in Energy: Phase 1
3.1. Current Landscape Study Based on Review of the Literature
3.2. Current Landscape Analysis Based on UKRI Survey
4. Roadmap of Research and Innovation Infrastructure in Energy by 2030: Phase 2
- ▪
- Whole energy systems;
- ▪
- Energy storage;
- ▪
- Renewable energy sources;
- ▪
- Carbon capture and storage;
- ▪
- Fuel cells and hydrogen;
- ▪
- Alternative fuels;
- ▪
- Nuclear energy.
4.1. Challenges and Capability Requirements of Subsectors
4.1.1. Subsector 1: Whole Energy Systems (Including Demand and Networks)
4.1.2. Subsector 2: Energy Storage
4.1.3. Subsector 3: Renewable Energy Sources
4.1.4. Subsector 4: Carbon Capture and Storage
4.1.5. Subsector 5: Fuel Cells and Hydrogen
4.1.6. Subsector 6: Alternative Fuels
4.1.7. Subsector 7: Nuclear Energy
5. Links to E-Infrastructure and Data Needs for Energy Sector by 2030
6. Discussion
7. Summary
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Existing Energy Infrastructure
- Whole energy systems—interdisciplinary research
- Centre for Renewable Energy Systems Technology (CREST)
- The Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research
- Buildings
- Building Research Establishment (BRE)
- Salford Energy House
- Power Systems
- Tony Davies High Voltage Laboratory (TDHVL)
- Power Network Demonstration Centre (PNDC)
- National Grid Power System Research Centre, including the High Voltage and High Current Test Laboratory
- High Power Laser Energy Research facility (HIPER)
- Energy system demonstrators
- Integrated Transport Electricity and Gas Research Laboratory (InTEGReL)
- Keele Smart Energy Network Demonstrator (SEND)
- Nuclear
- Culham Centre for Fusion Energy (CCFE), including the Joint European Torus (JET) and the Mega Amp Spherical Tokamak (MAST)
- ORION
- National Nuclear User Facility (NNUF), including the Microscope and Ion Accelerator for Materials Investigations facility (MIAMI)
- Dalton Cumbria Facility (DCF) of Manchester University
- Nuclear Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (AMRC)
- National Nuclear Laboratory
- CCS
- Peterhead Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) Project
- Renewable Energy Sources
- Wind
- National Renewable Energy Centre (NAREC)
- Energy Technology Centre (ETC)
- Hunterston Offshore Wind Turbine Test facility
- Marine, wave and tidal
- European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC)
- Marine renewables test centre
- Peninsular Research Institute for Marine Renewable Energy (PRIMaRE)
- FloWave Ocean Energy Research Facility
- Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult (ORE Catapult), National Renewable Energy Centre
- Wave Hub Ltd.
- Solar
- NaREC Photovoltaic Technology Centre (PVTC)
- Centre for Solar Energy Research (CSER)
- Low Carbon Research Institute (LCRI)
- Alternative Fuels
- European Bioenergy Research Institute (EBRI)
- Hydrogen
- Renewable Hydrogen Research and Development Centre
- Energy technologies & markets
- The Energy Centre Thornton Science Park
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Demonstrator | Key Features |
---|---|
Newcastle Helix | Urban, mixed use, new build, multi-vector, data rich |
ETI/ESCat Smart Systems and Heat | Urban, domestic, retrofit, heat and power |
Findhorn | Eco village, socio technical |
Haringey | Socio technical urban living laboratory |
Thames Valley Vision | Industrial and commercial demand response |
Cockle Park Farm | Rural, farming, anaerobic digester, heat and power |
Customer Led Network Revolution (CLNR) | Storage, smart grids, suburban, rural, medium and low voltage |
Academic | Non-Academic | Government | Totals | |
---|---|---|---|---|
One-to-one interview and online survey | 79 | 31 | 16 | 126 |
Phase 1 consultation workshop 1 (London) | 29 | 5 | 2 | 36 |
Phase 1 consultation workshop 2 (Edinburgh) | 16 | 6 | 1 | 23 |
Phase 2 workshop 1 (London) | 16 | 11 | 2 | 29 |
Phase 2 workshop 2 (London) | 17 | 7 | 4 | 28 |
Total | 157 | 60 | 25 | 242 |
Energy Related Area | Energy RII(s) |
---|---|
Whole energy systems—interdisciplinary research |
|
Buildings |
|
Power systems |
|
Energy system demonstrators |
|
Nuclear |
|
CCS |
|
Renewable energy sources | Wind
|
Alternative fuels |
|
Hydrogen |
|
Energy technologies & markets |
|
Area of the Energy Infrastructure (in the UK) | Responded to UKRI Survey | Identified by CESI 1 | Total |
---|---|---|---|
Whole energy system
| 1 1 2 1 1 | 3 0 2 0 0 | 4 1 4 1 1 |
Power systems | 0 | 5 | 5 |
Energy system demonstrator | 1 | 1 | 2 |
Nuclear | 3 | 4 | 7 |
Carbon capture and storage | 1 | 1 | 2 |
Energy storage | 3 | 0 | 3 |
Renewable energy sources
| 1 3 0 0 | 4 5 3 0 | 5 8 3 0 |
Alternative fuels | 2 | 2 | 4 |
Hydrogen | 0 | 1 | 1 |
General infrastructures | 6 | 1 | 7 |
Total | 26 | 32 | 58 |
Science, Research, and/or Innovation Challenge | Potential Capability Required |
---|---|
To model whole energy system, in order to comprehend the cyber and physical consequences of decarbonizing heat, power, and transport | A Centre of Excellence for Energy Modelling, performing as a platform for nationally significant models Labs and facilities that join the physical and cyber components of a multi-vector energy system |
To optimize the control, investment, architecture, and cross vector interaction of energy systems | Living lab demonstrators coupled with a pipeline of innovation, data capture and analysis, market development, and considering the socio-techno-economic impact |
Digital twins of multi-vector energy system | Simulation for cyber-physical energy systems, together with the high-performance computing, cyber-physical models, and sensors |
Heat decarbonizing | Distribution network demonstration to investigate the district heating, heat electrification, and repurposing the hydrogen |
Science, Research, and/or Innovation Challenge | Potential Capability Required |
---|---|
To develop economical energy storage for thermal (heat/cooling), electrical energy, and demand at a considerable size | Test beds to enable different technologies of energy storage to be tested and expanded across various applications, such as grid-scale, generation-integrated, domestic, neighbourhood area, distribution networks |
Flexible storage of conditions in living lab | Large living labs for different archetypes including suburban, urban, industrial, and mixed Capabilities and resources for social science research for energy storage, focusing on extensive consumer research and change studies |
To integrate energy storage alongside wind energy generation | Testing platform for wind turbines, in which technologies used in energy storage can be experimented to show their potentials to store excess electricity thermally, chemically, and kinetically in batteries |
Emerging/new materials or technologies | Advanced material testing platform, characterization, and synthesis |
Science, Research, and/or Innovation Challenge | Potential Capability Required |
---|---|
Environmental study and social science investigation for printed photovoltaics (PVs), assisting the scale up and financial interests | A national centre for economical printed PV assisting the UK distributed research community and connecting manufacturing and adoption |
Studying large-scale tidal stream/wind/wave energy extraction and its interaction with the environment | Large-scale laboratory for wind-wave-current combined basins and measurement systems (fully instrumented at-sea demonstration sites) |
Advancement for UK geothermal capabilities. Unique UK geo-energy observatory capabilities should substantially improve underpinning subsurface geothermal science, along with further energy areas. Extra capability in this area is required because of its national importance, particularly once the technology enter the development phase | Facilities (medium to large) to investigate primary research on geothermal energy co-production, potentially accompanied by gas and oil production |
Tackling operational issues essential to inertia reduction of the energy system as a result of great penetration of renewables | Test bed with asynchronous inertia shafts, such as the ones in wind turbines, aimed at testing methods to include inertia in the electricity system |
Science, Research, and/or Innovation Challenge | Potential Capability Required |
---|---|
The way CCS infrastructure merge with the overall energy system | Test bed facility to determine how CCUS withstand changes in demand with the use of component testing in the CCS chain, a CO2 storage trial test bed, a combustion/hydrogen production experimental scale facility, and a CO2 transport facility |
Decarbonization method for heavy industry with CCUS (carbon capture, utilisation, and storage) | Synchronized facilities linking together to show next generation capture and utilisation technologies Optimising amine scrubbing, at a scale of equal to 1–10 MWe. This could be considered as an important link from small pilot plants to full-scale demonstrators. On a minor scale, these linked facilities should embed arising next generation capture technologies that shall progress via pilot-plants operating at a scale of ca. 50–500 kWe |
Determine less carbon generation with CCUS | Pilot scale capabilities to bridge the gap between fundamental study and analysis with commercialization, and link these together (TRL3-6) |
Investigate CO2 within the storage capability, and CO2 reaction to the host rock and the underground biology | A demonstration embedding CCS within energy system. A ‘borehole lab’ is required, with an array of boreholes, instrumentation, and research capability |
Science, Research and/or Innovation Challenge | Potential Capability Required |
---|---|
Utilisation of hydrogen and safety devices | A centre of excellence for hydrogen utilisation funded by manufacturers with networks to advance and share the lessons learned |
Mass generation of low carbon, cheap, resilient hydrogen | A demonstrator for low carbon hydrogen production to show hydrogen can be produced and supplied at low cost. This could be the source to the commercial market. |
Hydrogen utilisation in the gas network, either as 100% hydrogen or mixture | Research and development and demonstration to repurpose the gas grid (TRL 5-8), fuel cell research (TRL 6-8), gas storage (TRL 3-6), combustion (TRL 6-8) |
Exploring and responding to difficulties in underground storge of hydrogen | Capabilities or laboratories with an array of boreholes, and also hydrogen storage, pipework and measurement equipment |
Performance enhancement and decreasing the price of fuel cells | R&D capabilities which can investigate research and development of hydrogen economy and has the potential to develop fuel cells technology |
Science, Research, and/or Innovation Challenge | Potential Capability Required |
---|---|
Every element of the biofuels value chain Improved linkage amongst fuel chemistry and its characterisation properties (e.g., together with pollutant emissions) | Interdisciplinary laboratory for alternative fuels considering chemistry, mechanical engineering, and agriculture Academic capabilities (virtual) connected via a central capability |
Zero emissions vehicles (in addition to cars, other vehicles such as large vehicles, and non-automotive sectors, such as aviation or marine, and diesel generators) | One main centre to explore and strategize alternative fuels options. A research hub (similar to the Faraday Institution) enabling research and delivery for alternatives options |
Mapping of organic waste availability and evidenced-based life cycle analysis work to investigate the environmental impact of current systems against the possible savings of utilizing anaerobic digestion (AD)/biorefineries in urban/agricultural situations | A ‘virtual centre for AD’ with a supportive and collaborative research programme together with industry and academia |
Combustion and conversion | Essential trial equipment, which is instrumented, in order to deliver a controlled environment which is required for improving the knowledge of biofuel combustion behaviour and the comprehending its impact on the internal combustion engine |
Science, Research and/or Innovation Challenge | Potential Capability Required |
---|---|
Establish nuclear engineering capabilities that are required for supporting the upcoming new build programme, especially in system engineering | An engineering centre of excellence for nuclear energy is needed, to enable nuclear energy engineering from multiple disciplines to share scientific capabilities. Demonstration sites are required to support the Catapults’ agenda/programme of work |
Nuclear legacy management (high, intermediate and low level of waste, nuclear logistics, and decommissioning technology) | Capabilities for managing and examining active materials, better engineering and expansion. Capabilities for designing and developing management technologies, treatment, and waste minimisation for active and non-active environments Capabilities for drawing on huge advances in retail logistics via utilizing distributed digital systems (e.g., distributed control systems used in nuclear power plants). These enable better performance of the system, since they utilize various technologies, such as advanced HMIs (human system interfaces), improved diagnostics and maintenance, and bus technology |
Fission: Prospective fuels needs of prospective nuclear reactors (AMRs, GenIII+, Gen IV, SMRs) | Capabilities for developing and examining prospective fuels, inclusive of accident tolerant fuels. Preserving and expanding UK advanced fuel competency is required for current and prospective reactors, both defence and civil |
Fusion: Plasma control (heat management, superconducting magnets, and machine geometry) | Huge fusion reactors are needed to help and promote the study of plasma control, fusion, and superconducting magnet technology. A test bed and lab for a spherical tokamak suitable for generating electricity |
Facilitate following services in nuclear reactors: robotic maintenance, health monitoring, and high heat extraction. | Thorough and broad conceptual design centres to provide the following investigation and study for nuclear energy: high heat flux, material study, robotic maintenance, and component testing. |
Improved thermal transfer from reactor to electricity generation systems. | A thermal hydraulic research and test facility |
Advanced reactor understanding and development. | Demonstrators and labs which support the design capability understanding in the UK. These provide the informed assessment and development of prospective reactor designs, and also operation and regulation of these facilities. |
Several nuclear plants in the UK are about to be decommissioned, which will cause the following serious challenges: clean-up of a previous nuclear plant sites safe, extended storage and disposal of spent nuclear fuel and decommissioned nuclear plants wastes | A demonstrator and lab to assess the containment technology, geo-barriers and host rock properties/interactions with the stored waste. A capability for environmental remediation |
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Pourmirza, Z.; Hosseini, S.H.R.; Walker, S.; Giaouris, D.; Taylor, P. The Landscape and Roadmap of the Research and Innovation Infrastructures in Energy: A Review of the Case Study of the UK. Sustainability 2022, 14, 7197. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127197
Pourmirza Z, Hosseini SHR, Walker S, Giaouris D, Taylor P. The Landscape and Roadmap of the Research and Innovation Infrastructures in Energy: A Review of the Case Study of the UK. Sustainability. 2022; 14(12):7197. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127197
Chicago/Turabian StylePourmirza, Zoya, Seyed Hamid Reza Hosseini, Sara Walker, Damian Giaouris, and Philip Taylor. 2022. "The Landscape and Roadmap of the Research and Innovation Infrastructures in Energy: A Review of the Case Study of the UK" Sustainability 14, no. 12: 7197. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127197
APA StylePourmirza, Z., Hosseini, S. H. R., Walker, S., Giaouris, D., & Taylor, P. (2022). The Landscape and Roadmap of the Research and Innovation Infrastructures in Energy: A Review of the Case Study of the UK. Sustainability, 14(12), 7197. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14127197