Leek Post & Times

MOORLANDS team take top prize

▶ Digger giant’s low-noise electric machine hailed a ‘huge achievemen­t’ ▶ Moorlands team behind award from Royal Academy of Engineerin­g

- By Les Jackson leslie.jackson@reachplc.com

THE Moorlands-based team behind world’s first electric digger manufactur­ed by JCB has won a major award for its UK engineerin­g innovation.

The Royal Academy of Engineerin­g has announced JCB’S electric digger (19C-1E) as the winner of the 2020 Macrobert Award. The winning team receive a £50,000 prize and a gold medal. The Macrobert Award is the UK’S most prestigiou­s and longest running prize for engineerin­g.

The 19C-1E excavator is the world’s first volume-produced fully electric digger and with it, JCB has shown it is possible to make powerful constructi­on machinery without an internal combustion engine. To date, the current fleet has saved the equivalent of 15,100kg in CO2 emissions across 5,616 hours of work. But if used across the global constructi­on sector, which contribute­s 39 per cent of all carbon emissions, these savings could reach billions of tonnes.

JCB’S winning team are Tim Burnhope FRENG, chief innovation officer; Bob Womersley, director of advanced engineerin­g; Lee Harper, chief engineer – electrifie­d machines; Lee Milward, design manager and Corey Smith, test and developmen­t manager.

The announceme­nt is particular­ly timely following the Prime Minister’s commitment to putting building and constructi­on at the centre of the government’s plan for the UK’S economic recovery.

As well as significan­tly reducing carbon emissions, the electric digger has zero exhaust emissions and very low noise levels. This combinatio­n makes it much better suited than traditiona­l constructi­on vehicles to operating inside buildings or in areas where noise must be kept to a minimum, for example near hospitals and schools.

JCB launched the digger in 2019 and has already sold hundreds of the machines.

The Macrobert Award judges lauded JCB for demonstrat­ing the utility of electric machines in a constructi­on setting and the potential for future innovation to boost sustainabi­lity in the sector.

The hope is that this entry could do for the constructi­on sector what the double Macrobert Award winner Johnson Matthey did for the motor industry with the catalytic converter, which has stopped hundreds of millions of tonnes of pollution from entering the atmosphere.

Professor Sir Richard Friend FRENG FRS, chairman of the Royal Academy of Engineerin­g, Macrobert Award judging panel, said: “JCB’S electric digger is a huge engineerin­g achievemen­t.

“The team has developed all parts of the electric propulsion system to deliver system performanc­e that matches real customer requiremen­ts.

“This is a huge achievemen­t in itself, but the additional benefits of zero exhaust emissions and much lower noise has lifted the 19C-1E excavator to a new level. The digger is more than a great bit of engineerin­g, however. It has the power to be the catalyst for change in an industry that is responsibl­e for around 10 per cent of all of the UK’S carbon emissions.”

JCB chairman Lord Bamford said: “To win one of the world’s most respected engineerin­g prizes is an outstandin­g endorsemen­t for JCB’S electrific­ation team, who have achieved so much in applying a science which was new to our business. JCB’S electric mini excavator will contribute to a zero carbon future and help make the world more sustainabl­e. It’s a huge honour for our contributi­on to be recognised in this way.”

JCB’S electric digger was selected by the Macrobert Award judging panel in competitio­n with the other shortliste­d finalists: the all-electric I-PACE sports utility vehicle from Jaguar Land Rover; and ECOSMRT® liquid natural gas reliquific­ation technology from Babcock’s LGE business.

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 ??  ?? JCB’S award-winning electric digger in a reading room at London’s Caledonian Club. Inset, the Moorlandsb­ased team behind the project.
JCB’S award-winning electric digger in a reading room at London’s Caledonian Club. Inset, the Moorlandsb­ased team behind the project.

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