The Scotsman

Heriot-watt part of green revolution

- Scott Reid www.scotsman.com

A new £18 million centre for doctoral training involving Edinburgh’s Heriot-watt University will launch today to help back the UK’S green industrial revolution.

The Centre for Doctoral Training in Green Industrial Futures builds upon the pioneering work of UK Research & Innovation’s (UKRI) Industrial Decarbonis­ation Research and Innovation Centre (IDRIC). According to European Investment Bank research, four out of five companies consider skills shortages to be a barrier to their net zero projects.

Delivered by a consortium comprising four top research universiti­es — Heriot-watt, Imperial College London, University of Bath and University of Sheffield — the latest centre represents an £18m investment from UKRI through the Engineerin­g and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).

It will play a key role in training the next generation of innovators and leaders to deliver the technologi­es, systemsand­solutionsr­equiredto transition UK industry to net zero emissions by an agreed deadline of 2050.

The centre’s graduates will help develop the expertise and skills to tackle the biggest decarbonis­ation challenges facing industry.

Mercedes Maroto-valer, director of the Centre for Doctoral Training in Green Industrial Futures (CDT-GIF) and

UK industrial decarbonis­ation champion, said: “The outstandin­g research and crosssecto­r partnershi­ps cultivated through IDRIC have paved the way for this ambitious centre for doctoral training. By building directly on IDRIC’S foundation­s, we can hit the ground running to produce the doctoral talent and innovation pipeline that UK industry urgently needs to lead the global energy transition.

“This holistic approach will produce graduates with vital cross-disciplina­ry skills in systems thinking, industrial literacy, and the ability to contextual­ise and deploy decarbonis­ation technologi­es within the wider global system.” Alongside a fouryear research project, the CDTGIF students will undertake advanced training in the social, environmen­tal, economic and regulatory aspects of the net zero transition in industry, as well as profession­al developmen­t in areas such as business strategy, commercial­isation, “responsibl­e innovation” and policy engagement. Students will also have the opportunit­y to visit some of the world’s major pilot and demonstrat­ion facilities.

The new centre is also seeking industry partners to cocreate research projects.

Maroto-valer added: “Our CDT graduates will emerge as true energy transition leaders, not only technical experts, but also multidisci­plinary profession­als who understand the complex societal implicatio­ns of decarbonis­ation and can effectivel­y engage with industry, policymake­rs and the public.”

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