The UK government is offering £4.5 million ($6 million) in funding to strengthen the supply chain for power electronics, machines, and drive (PEMD) technology to be used in aviation applications. Grants of between £50,000 and £1 million are being offered by Innovate UK through the agency’s Building Talent for the Future 2 competition for which entries opened on January 12.
According to Professor Will Drury, challenge director for Innovate UK’s Driving the Electric Revolution initiative, there is a need to ensure that new and existing PEMD capabilities are available to companies working on new electric aircraft and propulsion systems. He told FutureFlight that advanced systems such as power electronics units to convert electricity to be used in motors or other devices like pumps are already being applied in other sectors, such as manufacturing, offshore wind turbines, and agricultural robotics.
The latest tranche of Innovate UK grants follows on from earlier government investment commitments of £80 million for the country’s PEMD sector. It is part of the wider UK Research & Innovation (UKRI) initiative to support efforts to achieve net-zero emissions from the country’s aviation sector by 2050. For instance, £33 million has been awarded to Newcastle University to support PEMD industrialization processes through open access equipment installed in multiple facilities across the UK.
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