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Manufacturing

National Composites Centre in Bristol to help deliver flagship wind turbine project

The NCC is one of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s world-leading research and development facilities

(From left) Richard Oldfield, chief Executive officer at the National Composites Centre, minister for industry Lee Rowley and Dr Stephen Wyatt, research and innovation director at ORE Catapult.(Image: handout)

The National Composites Centre (NCC) in Bristol has been selected to help deliver a £5m Government-funded project that will develop new components for offshore wind turbines.

The NCC has been chosen alongside fellow innovation centre Offshore Renewable Energy (ORE) Catapult for the Joule Challenge Phase 2 project.

The organisation, which is based at Bristol and Bath Science Park in Emersons Green, is one of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s world-leading composite research and development facilities.

It collaborates with businesses across sectors such as aerospace, energy, infrastructure and biomedical on complex engineering challenges, often to make products lighter, stronger, smarter and more sustainable.

Alongside ORE Catapult it will explore how light-weight composites could be used during the manufacturing of the "next generation" of wind turbines, capable of generating 20MW of power.

It comes as the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government seeks to accelerate the progress of fixed and floating offshore wind projects, deemed vital for achieving its target of net-zero carbon emissions by 2050 and for creating more jobs within the renewable energy sector.

The Joule Challenge project has already produced a plan for a 20MW demonstration turbine, incorporating a programme framework, identification of critical technology gaps, potential partners and stakeholders and a detailed technology development path.

The next phase of the programme will support ambitions to lower the cost of energy through lower cost manufacturing, increasing º£½ÇÊÓÆµ content and developing export opportunities of between £60-80m per year by 2030.