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Public Funding for Jeremy Benn Associates Limited

Registration Number 03246693

Offshore Charging Vessel

27,111
2021-09-01 to 2022-03-31
Collaborative R&D
The transition to hybrid-electric and fully electric vehicles on UK roads has been aided and enabled by the abundance of available outlets to recharge batteries (car park fast charging, domestic installations). The development of battery technology has removed factors that inhibit the uptake of vehicles including -- range anxiety, time taken to charge, and the number of cycles for each battery, which all impact value and utility. As the market has matured the UK Government has offered full support by legislating for a 2-phase ban on the sale of new conventional Internal Combustion Engines(ICE) in 2030, followed by a ban of new 'plug-in' hybrids by 2035\. This is due to the greenhouse gas emissions by ICE representing a significant barrier on the road to net-zero. In 2019, the UK Government released its Clean Maritime Plan, Maritime 2050, setting out its vision for the future of zero-emission shipping. By 2025, the Government expects that: "All vessels operating in UK waters are maximising the use of energy efficiency options. All new vessels being ordered for use in UK waters are being designed with zero-emission propulsion capability. Zero-emission commercial vessels are in operation in UK waters." One solution (mirroring land) for zero-emission propulsion is the utilisation of electrically-driven propulsion systems. Importantly, however, this requires battery capacity on board to support safe vessel transit _to /from_ port. There are two logical approaches to enable this, each with advantages and disadvantages: \*Use existing battery technology to deliver the required power. This will enable vessels to overcome the existing range anxiety. However, with current battery energy density this will be both expensive and heavy in comparison to existing ICE/hybrid solutions to achieve the necessary range; \*Use existing battery technology but create offshore charging 'platforms' akin to land. This would limit the cost and weight associated with batteries. However, while there are 'main routes' on land, altering vessel routes to attend 'refuel' stations is not economical to a vessel on charter. This project seeks to identify the feasibility of a charging vessel, that is capable of taking charge from an OWF in times of low National Grid demand and delivering that to any other third-party vessel using electrically/hybrid-driven propulsion, or by battery 'hot-swapping', therefore maximising the zero-emission capability of the vessel fleet. The vessel will be fitted with electrified 'daughter' craft(eCTVs) for O&M activities and can sail to locations of highest demand, essentially a mobile recharge platform.

Improving resilience through a surface water flooding decision support system

346,153
2020-07-01 to 2021-06-30
Small Business Research Initiative
Awaiting Public Project Summary

Lancaster University and Jeremy Benn Associates Limited

2019-05-01 to 2021-07-31
Knowledge Transfer Partnership
To explore how new digital technologies and data science concepts can bring benefits for managing flood risk. Semantically-enriched databases, collaborative software tools and a blend of data types will be used to develop a new platform for flood resilience planning.

Lancaster University and Jeremy Benn Associates Limited

2014-12-01 to 2016-11-30
Knowledge Transfer Partnership
To extend and generalise a multivariate conditional exceedance model for flood risk and improve on existing prototype applications by including information about rainfall extremes.

Flood Foresight: Near real-time assessment of flood impact potential for the insurance and civil contingencies sectors

59,860
2014-04-01 to 2015-03-31
Feasibility Studies
We aim to develop a demonstrator for real-time flood monitoring & impact assessment for re/insurance and civil contingency sectors. This “Foresight” system provides a technical harness for a diverse and disparate set of environmental data, including river gauge data, hazard maps and assets at risk. The system, delivered as a webservice, will be compatible with existing business intelligence and decision support tools currently used. “Foresight” will provide: multi-temporal updates of forecast flood hazard based on live environmental data feeds; geographic intersection of a spatial database of exposed assets with dynamic hazard maps; near real-time alert warnings based on user thresholds of risk tolerance; assessment of potential impact from unfolding flood events, in days and hours before peak flood. “Foresight” allows users to reduce response times and ensure efficacy and appropriateness of response decisions. The 12-month project will prove the methodological and technical foundation for future implementation of a multi-hazard, multi-territory impact forecasting webservice for a range of sectors. Advisors include Lloyd’s of London, Oasis LMF and the UK Cabinet Office.

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