The Gazette

£3.2m clean energy education hub opens

NEW COLLEGE FACILITY WILL HELP DEVELOP SKILLS NEEDED FOR LOW-CARBON SECTOR

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REDCAR and Cleveland College has opened the doors to its Clean Energy Education Hub, part of a recent £6.5m investment in college facilities.

Made possible by the Redcar Town Deal investment plan, the new £3.2m training centre will focus on giving people the skills to meet the demands of Teesside’s growing renewable and low-carbon sector.

“We are incredibly proud to deliver this outstandin­g new facility that responds to the exciting clean energy employment opportunit­ies across the Tees Valley,” said Redcar and Cleveland College principal, Jason Faulkner.

The college has worked in collaborat­ion with Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council and industry giants, including bp and Northern Gas Networks, who stepped up to help shape plans.

The Clean Energy Education Hub’s £2.4m capital injection is a flagship project of the Town Deal Fund.

Darren Winter, chair of the Redcar Town Deal Board, said: “The Redcar Town Deal board is delighted to have been able to support this fantastic project.

“It will make a positive difference in the lives of people in Redcar and the surroundin­g area by equipping them with the relevant skills needed now in jobs and in the future, especially in new technologi­es.”

The Clean Energy Education Hub will specialise in clean and renewable industry training for school leavers, apprentice­s and adult learners, including commercial courses, bespoke employer led programmes and higher education.

It incorporat­es an all-new carbon capture rig, designed and built to help train and inspire the next generation of Net Zero engineers.

Kitted out with all new specialist hi-tech equipment, it will support training in EV charging, solar PV

installati­on, air source heat pump installati­on and maintenanc­e, industrial mechanical, and electrical training.

As the college is the Tees Valley’s official Retrofit Academy CIC training partner, the new facility will also offer retrofit courses, helping to meet the government’s 2050 Net Zero targets.

Supporting the project, energy giant bp has provided £50,000 in funding for the developmen­t, backed 20 paid engineerin­g scholarshi­ps for school leavers starting at the college this September and committed to help the hub reach into primary and secondary schools to

inspire young people across Teesside to pursue careers in clean energy.

Louise Kingham, bp’s UK head of country and senior vice president of Europe, said: “At bp we’re excited to be partnering with Redcar and Cleveland College to invest in young Teessiders, and to help them access the high-quality low carbon jobs and long-term careers.

“The Clean Energy Education Hub can be a vital support for our planned hydrogen and CCS projects and can help turn Teesside into a national leader for low carbon energy, with local people at the heart of that transition.”

Andrew Carter, assistant director for growth and enterprise at Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council, said: “It is fantastic that the Clean Energy Education Hub will now be opening doors for many local people who want to access the green energy industry which is promised on Teesworks.

“The hub will provide the skills and training needed ensuring people can access high-quality and

well-paid jobs created within the sector.

“As a council we have been proud to work in partnershi­p with the college on this project.

“It is also the first project from the Redcar Town Deal to be delivered, so I’d like to congratula­te everyone who is working so hard to transform Redcar for the better.”

The launch of the hub comes as students at Redcar and Cleveland College are reaping the benefits of DfE T Level investment in new workshops, specialist engineerin­g equipment, a revamped healthcare wing and nursery, following a further £3.3m cash injection in facilities.

With funding from the Department for Education’s T Level Capital Funding grant, the college has been approved to deliver T Level courses with specialist routes in engineerin­g, health science and early years.

Facilities include high-spec engineerin­g equipment, outdoor training spaces, a refurbishe­d health wing and early years teaching nursery.

The hub will provide the

skills and training needed ensuring people can access high-quality

and well-paid jobs.

Andrew Carter

 ?? ?? Back, from left, John Sampson, managing director of Redcar and Cleveland College Borough Council, Darren Winter, chair of the Redcar Town Deal Board, Redcar and Cleveland College principal Jason Faulkner and the college’s head of engineerin­g David Laycock. Front, from left, Coatham Primary School pupils Ava Davies, Amirah Begum and Emily Wilson who officially opened the centre
Back, from left, John Sampson, managing director of Redcar and Cleveland College Borough Council, Darren Winter, chair of the Redcar Town Deal Board, Redcar and Cleveland College principal Jason Faulkner and the college’s head of engineerin­g David Laycock. Front, from left, Coatham Primary School pupils Ava Davies, Amirah Begum and Emily Wilson who officially opened the centre
 ?? ?? Inside the clean energy education hub
Inside the clean energy education hub

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