Green aviation facility given £7.6m boost by D2N2 LEP
The University of Nottingham has been awarded £7.6m by the D2N2 LEP towards the development of the £16.8m UK Electrification of Aerospace Propulsion Facility (UKEAPF).
The UKEAPF is one of ten projects across Derby, Derbyshire, Nottingham, and Nottinghamshire which has received funding from D2N2’s £44mshare of the government’s £900m Getting Building Fund.
Hosted within the new Power Electronics and Electrical Machines Centre at the University of Nottingham, the facility will support the East Midlands vision to be the world’s foremost location for low carbon aerospace innovation.
The facility will accelerate the development of new electrical machines and drive systems required for the greening of aviation through extensive test and validation equipment.
By March 2024, it is estimated that £140m worth of industrial work aligned with this facility will be undertaken, creating 300 new jobs and 150 new learners by 2025.
At a national level, UKEAPF will support the government’s target of raising research and development investment and contribute to the Governments 10 point green plan by supporting increased decarbonisation in a key sector.Elizabeth Fagan, chair of D2N2 LEP Board said: “UKEAPF will accelerate the green recovery and growth for the UK aerospace industry, ensuring the East Midlands remains the world’s foremost location for aerospace innovation unlocking investment, creating new jobs and protecting the aerospace supply-chain jobs in the region.”
Vice-chancellor of the University of Nottingham, professor Shearer West, said: “The University’s global research programme has a well-deserved reputation for supporting a more sustainable planet and solving global problems. This exciting investment demonstrates a commitment to world-leading discovery, with Nottingham at the forefront of increasingly important research into greener, cleaner aviation globally.
“The fusion of the region’s industrial capability together with the University’s research expertise will offer unparalleled opportunities to realise a net zero carbon ambition for the aerospace industry.”
Chris Gerada, professor of electrical machines at the University of Nottingham said: “This project will exploit the University’s expertise in Power Electronics and Electrical Machines by working closely with industrial partners in this new facility to develop next generation products, helping to deliver aviation’s net zero commitments.
“The investment will reinforce the UK’s and the East Midlands’ reputation as the go-to place for the development of Electrification Technologies for future Aerospace Platforms.”
Source: The Business desk