UK Energy Research Centre
AbbreviationUKERC
FormationApril 2004 (2004-04)
Location
Region served
United Kingdom
Director
Robert Gross
AffiliationsUK Research and Innovation
Websitewww.ukerc.ac.uk

The UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC) carries out interdisciplinary research into sustainable future energy systems. It's whole systems research programme addresses the challenges and opportunities presented by the transition to a net zero energy system and economy.

The centre is funded by the UK Research and Innovation Energy Programme. UKERC is a distributed centre with researchers at over 20 different institutions throughout the UK, its headquarters are based at University College London.

Currently in its fourth phase of funding (2019-2024), UKERC’s activities are overseen by a committee consisting of the UKERC Director, Professor Rob Gross, and eleven Co-Directors, and is advised by an independent Advisory Board.

History

UKERC was established in April 2004, following a recommendation from the 2002 Energy Review initiated by Sir David King, the UK Government's Chief Scientific Advisor.[1] The centre was set up to address key controversies in the energy field through comprehensive assessments of the current state of knowledge.[2] The first phase of the Centre ran from 2004 - 2009.

In March 2009, £18.5 million was allocated to support the second phase of work at the UK Energy Research Centre for 2009 – 2014.[3] Under the second phase of funding, UKERC focused on five themes: Energy Demand, Energy Supply, Energy Systems, Energy and Environment, and Technology and Policy Assessment.[4]

In May 2014, the UK Energy Research Centre was awarded funding for a third phase of work, which ran from 2014 to 2019.[5] This research programme focused on six core themes: future energy system pathways; resources and vectors; energy systems at multiple scales; energy, economy and societal preferences; decision making; technology, policy and assessment - with an HQ function aimed at engaging with the wider UK energy research community, policy makers and energy industry.

UKERC's interdisciplinary research studentships have enabled whole-systems interdisciplinary research across scientific, engineering and socio-economic boundaries.

Current Activity

Currently in its fourth phase of funding, UKERC'S research programme encompasses a variety of different activities that address the challenges and opportunities presented by the transition to a net-zero energy system.

This research includes major themes on global energy challenges and their implications for the UK; the role of local and regional energy systems; interdependencies between energy systems and the environment; decarbonisation of specific sectors including transport, heat and industry; and transitions in energy infrastructures.

Alongside these activities UKERC undertakes systematic evidence reviews, hosts and curates energy data, maps and monitors public engagement with energy systems, and improves the transparency and understanding of energy models.

In July 2022, the UKERC launched a socalled public engagement observatory designed to track public engagement efforts across the United Kingdom.[6]

Recent Research

References

  1. "History". www.ukerc.ac.uk.
  2. Global Oil Depletion: An assessment of the evidence for a near-term peak in global oil production Archived 2009-10-12 at the Wayback Machine, page i, August 2009, published October 08, 2009, UK Energy Research Centre, ISBN 1-903144-03-5
  3. £18 million to secure the future of UK energy research, July 2009, NERC
  4. "All publications can be accessed via the current UKERC website. To view further phase two research activities access an archived version of the UKERC website". UK Web Archive.
  5. "RCUK commits £14 million to UK Energy Research Centre - EPSRC website". www.epsrc.ac.uk.
  6. Chilvers, Jason; Pallett, Helen; Hargreaves, Tom; Stephanides, Phedeas; Waller, Laurie (July 2022). An observatory for public engagement with energy and climate change: a briefing note introducing the UKERC public engagement observatory (PDF). London, United Kingdom: UK Energy Research Centre. doi:10.5286/ukerc.edc.000954.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.