News Release

New Nuclear Build and Manufacturing Program to address UK's capability gap

Grant and Award Announcement

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

A joint project between the universities of Manchester and Sheffield for a New Nuclear Build and Manufacturing (NNUMAN) programme has been awarded £4m funding by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) to research innovative manufacturing for the future of the UK's nuclear power supply.

A recent House of Lords' Science and Technology Committee report – Nuclear Research and Development Capabilities – identified insufficient research and development capacity as a potential threat to the UK's ability to produce power from nuclear energy.

The proposal from Manchester and Sheffield addressed this concern by promoting research and development to evolve a robust civil nuclear power supply to meet UK and global energy needs well into the future with significant work on the fundamentals of manufacturing for new nuclear new build and the next generation of power stations.

By acting as the research engine for nuclear manufacturing, NNUMAN will drive progress and step-change technologies up the Technology Readiness Scale. The most improved manufacturing processes developed in NNUMAN will be taken forward to prototype in the Nuclear Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (Nuclear AMRC) in Rotherham and the National Nuclear Laboratory (NNL) to enable UK manufacturing companies to learn the benefits of the new methods and use them in the future.

Through a programme of multi-disciplinary research at Manchester and Sheffield, the next generation of nuclear manufacturing scientists and engineers will be trained with the highest level of academic and technical support, using world-class facilities and with strong links to industry. They will develop high level skills in readiness to fill new high-quality jobs throughout the supply chain created through the growth in the manufacturing sector linked with nuclear build.

Professor Dave Delpy, EPSRC's Chief Executive, said:

"Several years ago EPSRC recognised the importance of maintaining an expertise in nuclear engineering in the UK, and made a strategic investment in postgraduate training through its Keeping the Nuclear Option Open (KNOO) initiative and subsequent funding programmes. The New Nuclear Build and Manufacturing programme builds on these earlier investments and will play a key role in helping develop new manufacturing techniques that will lead to materials that can function more effectively in the hostile operating environments of a nuclear reactor. Having a cutting edge capability in these fields will mean we have a stronger foothold in the manufacturing sector and are able to attract the best students and researchers to the UK."

Professor Andrew Sherry, Director of the Dalton Nuclear Institute at The University of Manchester, said:

"Innovation in manufacturing technology for new nuclear build offers the UK a real growth opportunity. We are delighted that NNUMAN will now be the research engine that drives this forward. "

Professor Keith Ridgway, programme director of the Nuclear AMRC and Executive Dean of the University of Sheffield Advanced Manufacturing Institute, said:

"This funding will help us to look at the longer term manufacturing research needs of the nuclear industry. The work we will do in the NNUMAN project will feed directly into the applications-directed work of the Nuclear AMRC."

Mike Burke, Director of Research & Technology, Nuclear AMRC and Programme Director, based at the Dalton Nuclear Institute's Manufacturing Technology Research Laboratory at The University of Manchester, said:

"This programme grant is a foresighted investment that will enable the pursuit of new and more efficient manufacturing technologies while maintaining the standards of reliability and safety that are expected in the nuclear industry.

"It also represents an exciting opportunity for our next generation of scientists and engineers to develop state-of-the-art understanding of new processes and product performance."

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For media enquiries contact:

Daniel Cochlin, Engineering and Physical Sciences, Media
Relations Officer
The University of Manchester
T:0161-275-8387 M:07917506158
daniel.cochlin@manchester.ac.uk
www.manchester.ac.uk

Tim Chapman, Nuclear AMRC Communications Manager,
University of Sheffield
T:0114-222-9913 M: 07872-419671
t.chapman@namrc.co.uk
http://namrc.co.uk/

Richard Tibenham, Media Relations Manager, EPSRC Press Office
T:01793-444404
pressoffice@epsrc.ac.uk

Notes for Editors:

About the Dalton Nuclear Institute at The University of Manchester

The University of Manchester, a member of the Russell Group, is the most popular university in the UK. It has 22 academic schools and hundreds of specialist research groups undertaking pioneering multi-disciplinary teaching and research of worldwide significance.

The Dalton Nuclear Institute, a winner of the Diamond Jubilee Round 2011 Queen's Anniversary Prize for Higher and Further Education for its nuclear capability, provides the focus for Manchester's capabilities across the full range of nuclear science, engineering, policy and business. http://www.manchester.ac.uk/dalton

About the Nuclear Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (Nuclear AMRC)

The Nuclear AMRC is a collaboration between the University of Sheffield and The University of Manchester. Based on the same collaborative model as the established University of Sheffield AMRC with Boeing, the Nuclear AMRC develops new manufacturing techniques and technologies to meet the demands of the new generation of nuclear power stations. Founding members include Areva, Westinghouse, Rolls-Royce, Sheffield Forgemasters and Tata Steel Europe. http://namrc.co.uk

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)

The Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) is the UK's main agency for funding research in engineering and the physical sciences. EPSRC invests around £800 million a year in research and postgraduate training, to help the nation handle the next generation of technological change. The areas covered range from information technology to structural engineering, and mathematics to materials science. This research forms the basis for future economic development in the UK and improvements for everyone's health, lifestyle and culture. EPSRC works alongside other Research Councils with responsibility for other areas of research. The Research Councils work collectively on issues of common concern via Research Councils UK. http://www.epsrc.ac.uk


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