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Economic Development

Could research funding be a roadblock to Net Zero? Hull's new vice chancellor airs concerns

Prof Dave Petley wants to ensure ideas factories are as productive as possible when it comes to addressing the major challenges of the generation

Professor Dave Petley, new Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hull.(Image: Timm Cleasby / The Picture Found)

Reassurance over research vital to the Humber’s role as a world leader in decarbonisation of heavy industry is being sought by University of Hull’s new vice chancellor.

Prof Dave Petley addressed the launch of The Waterline Summit, the event the ‘ideas factory’ he joined seven weeks ago partners with Marketing Humber to deliver. He was a panellist for the opening hosted by Louise Minchin, and was addressing barriers to overcome on the journey to Net Zero.

Since Brexit there have been question marks on how research, development and innovation will be funded as the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ withdraws from pan-European set-ups, with the current cost-of-living crisis and strain on government financing causing a further dual issue for the academic sector.

Read more: Former Energy Secretary claims government has been 'backsliding' on green agenda

Prof Petley said: “The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ is the world-leading science base and we have invested heavily with real significant results around that. We are going to require that investment in the science base and transitional research to obtain the aims we have. There is a real lack of clarity with the future funding of research.

“We’ve made some of our best steps through European Research Partnerships, Horizon Europe, and at the moment there is no clarity about participation in these schemes. They are based on outputs, really good and involve trans-national collaboration. We are seeing a real erosion of the ability to undertake research and innovation to drive this change.”
Having arrived from the University of Sheffield, where he was vice president for innovation, he succeeded Prof Susan Lea in Hull.

And he has outlined how the university’s remit can stretch much further than the technical requirement - with an ability to focus on the legal, political and socio-economic areas climate change demands attention from.

Prof Petley said: “We are an ideas factory, and there is complexity to this challenge. We are very well involved in the development of technologies that we are going to need to solve the problem. CCS and sustainable aviation fuels are some of the most difficult challenges we face.There has been a lot of work around implementation, and it is not just a technology problem but also a political problem and a legal problem, and we can manage a solution.