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End Use Energy Demand Centres Collaborative Projects

Reference Number
EP/P006779/1
Title
End Use Energy Demand Centres Collaborative Projects
Status
Completed
Energy Categories
Energy Efficiency(Other)
Energy Efficiency(Residential and commercial)
Energy Efficiency(Transport)
Energy Efficiency(Industry)
Other Cross-Cutting Technologies or Research(Environmental, social and economic impacts)
Research Types
Basic and strategic applied research
Science and Technology Fields
SOCIAL SCIENCES (Economics and Econometrics)
SOCIAL SCIENCES (Business and Management Studies)
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Electrical and Electronic Engineering)
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Mechanical, Aeronautical and Manufacturing Engineering)
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Architecture and the Built Environment)
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation
Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Consumer attitudes and behaviour)
Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Technology acceptance)
Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Other sociological economical and environmental impact of energy)
Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Policy and regulation)
Principal Investigator
Mr AZP Smith
Bartlett Sch of Env, Energy & Resources
University College London
Award Type
Standard
Funding Source
EPSRC
Start Date
14 September 2016
End Date
13 July 2018
Duration
22 months
Total Grant Value
£202,313
Industrial Sectors
Energy
Region
London
Programme
Energy : Energy
Investigators
Principal Investigator
Mr AZP Smith, Bartlett Sch of Env, Energy & Resources, University College London
Other Investigator
Professor J Barrett, School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds
Professor GP Hammond, Mechanical Engineering, University of Bath
Professor NJ Hewitt, School of the Built Environment, University of Ulster
Dr M Kolokotroni, Sch of Engineering and Design, Brunel University
Dr R Liddiard, Bartlett Sch of Env, Energy & Resources, University College London
Professor GG Maidment, Faculty of Engineering, Science and the Built Environment, London South Bank University
Dr T Schwanen, Geography OUCE, University of Oxford
Professor E Shove, Sociology, Lancaster University
Professor SR Sorrell, School of Business Management &Economics, University of Sussex
Professor SA Tassou, Sch of Engineering and Design, Brunel University
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract
The End Use Energy Demand centres are a 30m investment of the RCUK Energy Programme, with over 200 researchers across over 25 institutions running from 2013-2018. In 2015 it was agreed that collaborative work across the six centres on key themes would add extra value to the centres' work. 5 collaborative projects are outlined here, of the type that will run in the remaining funding period (spring '16 - spring '18). The funding is flexible so that the Directors can use it to greatest effect.1. Analysing SuperMarket Energy Data - will combine the knowledge and skills of three centres CEE, CSEF and i-STUTE to create a clearer picture of supermarket energy use in the UK which can then inform policy and industry on future energy demand decisions.2. Establishing a research programme on exergy economics - CIED and CIE-Map centre experts will combine to raise awareness and build capacity of this emerging field of research (which focusses on energy that can do work as opposed to all energy expended) with a view to laying foundations for future work in the field.3. Heat pump and thermal energy storage technologies for industrial energy demand reduction - This project will combine the expertise of three of the centre (CSEF, i-STUTE and CIE-MAP) to consider further the potential contribution of heat pumps, sorption refrigeration and thermal energy storage technologies for energy efficiency and decarbonisation of the industrial sector. The project will also identify future research and development needs for the improvement of the thermoeconomic performance of these technologies.4. Conceptualising Infrastructures, innovation and demand - DEMAND and CIED are both concerned with innovations in infrastructures and practice, and with the implications of these dynamics for energy and mobility demand. Whilst the two centres approach this topic from different angles, current research - for instance, on city scale innovation, on pathways to district and home heating, on novel nstitutional/ infrastructural conjunctions (e.g. around electric vehicles), and on peaks and patterns of demand - is generating a series of important cross-cutting questions to do with space, time and scale. 5. Invisible energy policy: new opportunities for intervention - Many different areas of government policy - health, education, defence, welfare and economic policy to name but a few, have tangible consequences for energy demand and for patterns of mobility. DEMAND and CIE-MAP will combine forces to help articulate and identify critical areas of what we describe as 'invisible' energy policy
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Added to Database
14/08/17