A new research hub is being launched to boost innovative measures to decarbonise and improve transport with government funding.
Decarbonisation Minister Jesse Norman has announced applications are open for organisations to host the new hub, with the Government pledging £10 million in funding for the centre, which will establish a UK centre of excellence for transport innovation.
Currently, transport accounts for 27 per cent of the UK’s emissions and the ‘Net Zero Transport for a Resilience Future’ hub will drive decarbonisation solutions, such as greater use of recycled materials and reducing the carbon footprint of repairs and maintenance.
The hub will also develop and implement innovative ideas to ensure future transport is resilient and meets the challenges of climate adaption, such as changes to weather and water levels.
Decarbonisation Minister Jesse Norman said:
“Innovation is key to the growth of the transport sector, and the creation of high-skilled jobs and business opportunities across the UK.
“This new UK research hub will build a centre of excellence for the future development of low-carbon transport.”
The hub will seek to support innovation by developing real-world solutions across a range of academic disciplines, such as architecture and design, computing, and behavioural sciences.
It will aim to provide a link for early-stage innovation and later stage demonstration across multiple transport modes to create, develop and test climate-resilient solutions that recognise how different places and types of transport will require different answers.
By researching the challenges of the transport sector in adapting to climate change and securing UK innovation, the centre will look to offer responsive, practical, evidence-based support to transport decision-makers and develop and implement sustainable, low-carbon solutions across existing and new infrastructure.
Some of the areas the hub will be expected to research include:
UK Research and Innovation Building a Green Future lead, Professor Sir Duncan Wingham, added:
“A partnership between the Department for Transport and UKRI, the Net Zero Transport Infrastructure for a Resilient Future Research Hub will lead the cross-UK research that is needed to effect transformational change in the transport sector.
"It will lead future developments to decarbonise our transport sector, a crucial component of achieving the UK’s net zero 2050 target.
“It will also help to ensure our transport systems remain resilient to hazards caused by extreme weather events and climactic changes that are already apparent.”
Over 80% of the funding for the hub will come from Government through the Department for Transport, UKRI (via the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), and organisations in the Transport Research and Innovation Board (TRIB), with the remaining coming from the winning research centre, which will become the home of the hub.