Professor Deborah Greaves OBE FREng explains how the University of Plymouth’s extensive expertise and facilities will play a prominent role in enabling the organisations ready to drive this opportunity.
The Celtic Sea provides a huge opportunity related to the deployment of offshore wind and renewable energy to meet UK Government targets of generating 4.5 GW of energy by 2035, and 12 GW by 2045.
The University is in a unique position in that we have a full ecosystem supporting all aspects of deployment of new and novel maritime technology. As a significant enabler for the roll-out of Floating Offshore Wind (FLOW), we:
· optimise the hydrodynamic design of Offshore Renewable Structures, for performance and survivability;
· lead on advanced, high-tech autonomous ocean data collection;
· enhance and safe-guards operations with our state-of-the-art simulators and cyber resilience test-beds;
· fundamentally understand how operations will interact with the ocean environment through our leading marine science research.
We are leading on this research insight for the sector, enabled by significant investment over 12 years in our COAST Lab and leadership of the national Supergen Offshore Renewable Energy Hub, our new Kongsberg DP Simulator, nationally unique Cyber-SHIP Lab and extensive robotic fleet.
Already engaging 100’s of companies small, large, local and international, in partnerships that will not only de-risk and optimise their operations, but also see our highly skilled graduates becoming a vital part of their future workforce going forwards.
[ Ссылка ]
Ещё видео!