The UK’s Business and Energy Secretary, Greg Clark, announced on Monday the launch of the country’s Industrial Strategy’s landmark “Faraday Challenge,” a 4 year, £246 million investment round intended to boost both research and development of expertise in battery technology.
Speaking in a keynote speech on the UK Industrial Strategy, Secretary Clark launched the Faraday Challenge, a move which is intended to make the United Kingdom a global leader in battery storage technical expertise.
The government will commit £246 million over four years, starting with the launch of a £45 million “Battery Institute” competitive to establish a centre for battery research, itself aimed at making battery technology more accessible and more affordable.
“Joining together the research, development, application and manufacture of energy storage technologies — and specifically battery storage — is a huge opportunity for the energy sector and the automotive sector alike,” Secretary Greg Clark said in his speech at the University of Birmingham.
“So as part of our Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund I am today launching the Faraday Challenge, which will put £246 million into research, innovation and scale-up of battery technology.
“The first element will be a competition led by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council to bring the best minds and facilities together to create a Battery Institute.”
Specifically, the Faraday Challenge will be divided up into three separate streams — research, innovation, and scale-up — each designed to drive what the UK Government is calling a “step-change in translating the UK’s world-leading research into market-ready technology that ensures economic success for the UK.” The three streams will look like this:
“The work that we do through the Faraday Challenge will – quite literally – power the automotive and energy revolution where, already, the UK is leading the world,” Secretary Clark said.
Unsurprisingly, the news was warmly welcomed by the country’s renewable energy industries.
“Today is the starting gun for the UK to become the world-leader in innovative battery storage technologies,” said the RenewableUK’s Executive Director, Emma Pinchbeck. “The energy sector agrees that a clean, flexible and modern energy system is the future, a future which relies on a clear vision from Government, working in partnership with businesses.
“Renewables are a mainstream technology, reliably providing over 25% of our electricity. The advent of battery storage is the missing puzzle piece which will allow us to maximise the potential of our world-beating renewable energy resources here in the UK.”
“The global market is quickly moving towards a decentralised model, relying less on large fossil generation and more on flexible and increasingly cheap renewable sources,” added James Court, Head of Policy and External Affairs at the Renewable Energy Association.
“More energy storage empowers this and will lead to a lower cost, lower carbon energy system that will benefit households and businesses across the country.
“The launch of a battery institute will help guide next-generation storage technologies through the hazards that lay between a good idea in a lab and actual deployment in homes and on solar farms.”
Source: Cleantechnica. Reproduced with permission.
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