The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

University’s champion of green energy

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From New South Wales to northeast Scotland, Tavis Potts has come a long way to spearhead Aberdeen University’s new Centre for Energy Transition (CET).

The Australian has spent much of his career researchin­g how people and institutio­ns approach sustainabi­lity and the fair use of environmen­tal resources, helping communitie­s maximise the benefits arising from emerging green industries.

Arriving in Scotland in 2006, Potts worked with the Scottish Associatio­n for Marine Science where he studied how coastal communitie­s could capitalise on the growing use of marine renewables.

In 2014 he moved to Aberdeen University, and now, as a reader in environmen­tal geography, finds himself as the right person, in the right place, at the right time, as Aberdeen looks to a future beyond oil and gas.

Potts believes that through the CET, whose mission is to bring the power of interdisci­plinary research to bear on the climate crisis and the shift to net zero, the university is uniquely placed to play a leading role.

“One of our strengths is the strong research tradition on energy that is now orientatin­g towards driving the transition to net zero,” he explained.

“We have a very strong culture of research across our schools, working on topics such as renewable energy technologi­es, carbon capture and storage, smart grid integratio­n, green hydrogen production, circular economy and decommissi­oning and just transition­s.

“The approach of the centre is to pull together all the diverse strands of this research, identify our key strengths and ensure that we are connected into societal demands.”

Central to this vision is the concept of the “just transition” – ensuring that communitie­s can maximise the benefits of the move to a low carbon economy fairly and sustainabl­y, particular­ly in the context of the green recovery from Covid.

This is particular­ly relevant in the Granite City, where 50 years of the North Sea oil and gas industry means the area is well placed to capitalise on the opportunit­ies presented by the energy transition.

“It is a scientific, technical, economic and societal challenge,” Potts said. “We really need to bring communitie­s with us on this journey, as without a strong civic commitment to energy transition we will simply not succeed in the uptake of new technologi­es that require significan­t changes in policy and societal acceptance.”

Operating under eight themes spanning multiple discipline­s, the structure of the CET is designed to align to regional and global opportunit­ies, particular­ly on how regions transition from carbon intensive to low carbon economies. This falls under the broader goal of supporting delivery of the Scottish and UK net-zero targets and the global objective to limit warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius.

With 17 academic staff now appointed as champions, themes include renewable generation, carbon capture and natural capital, hydrogen economy, oil and gas in transition, circular economy, integratio­n and digitalisa­tion, demand and markets, and energy system governance.

In addition to research, the CET also promotes education, training and skills in energy transition ranging from full-time masters programmes such as the recent MSc in Energy Transition Systems and Technologi­es and the MSc in Sustainabi­lity Transition­s. This adds to the university’s growing portfolio of short online courses and CPD programmes covering technical, legal and policy aspects of topics such as geothermal, hydro, solar, marine and wind energy and is responding to skills demands and training opportunit­ies for industry and government.

“What is particular­ly exciting about CET is the interdisci­plinary collaborat­ion across the themes and schools, how energy transition cuts across a wide array of discipline­s and how social transforma­tion and governance is a central part of our approach,” said Potts, who will take part in EV’s NexGen Energy event on March 31.

“The social sciences and humanities are there alongside the physical, natural, earth and engineerin­g sciences – it is this collective effort between academia, industry, government and society that is needed to address climate challenge at scale and within the next decade.

“Another strength of the university is our longterm connection to the energy industry. We have global connection­s to our graduates and alumni all working in industries and government­s that have a common challenge about how to meet our collective climate goals, decarbonis­e our economies and develop green growth strategies. We have an enormous resource.”

 ??  ?? LEADING THE WAY: Tavis Potts, from Aberdeen University’s new Centre for Energy Transition.
LEADING THE WAY: Tavis Potts, from Aberdeen University’s new Centre for Energy Transition.

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