Key Features
Organisations can apply for a share of up to £30 million for grants to carry out feasibility and engineering studies into energy efficiency and decarbonisation.
Programme: Innovate UK
Award: Share of up to £30 million
Opens: 20th Jul 2020
Closes: 28th Oct 2020
Overview
This Industrial Energy Transformation Fund (IETF) competition is offering up to £30 million, split across 2 strands, to fund feasibility, engineering studies and deployment.
In this strand projects must undertake a feasibility or an engineering study (experimental development) to develop either an energy efficiency or a deep decarbonisation project that enables possible subsequent deployment.
Scope
This strand of the competition aims to:
Feasibility studies
If you are carrying out a feasibility study it must:
Experimental development (engineering study)
Experimental development projects must be engineering studies. An engineering study is a detailed project plan that identifies specific technical requirements. The final report will be an overall document, summarising many separate studies carried out by different specialists. It is a structured, multi-disciplinary engineering design with the purpose of identifying key project design features and providing a project cost estimate.
Your project must provide sufficient detail to enable the site operator to make a final investment decision.
Innovate UK expect your engineering study to show appropriate consideration of:
Both feasibility studies and engineering studies must focus on one of the following.
Energy efficiency
Energy efficiency projects must support technologies that improve the energy efficiency of an industrial process or processes.
These must focus on deployment of technology that has been proven to work through successful operations and/or is qualified through test and demonstration.
You must follow the specific technical requirements.
Deep decarbonisation
Deep decarbonisation projects must result in a significant reduction in the greenhouse gas emissions of an industrial process and may not necessarily have an energy efficiency benefit.
These must focus on the deployment of technology that either:
or
You must follow the specific technical requirements.
Eligibility
To lead a project or work alone your organisation:
Academic institutions cannot lead or work alone.
This competition is aimed at specific types of business. These are determined by a code allocated at the time of registering at Companies House, called a standard industrial classification (SIC) code.
You will need to check your business SIC code to make sure you are eligible. For this competition your business must be one of these:
To collaborate with the lead your organisation must:
The lead must claim funding by entering their costs during the application. If the lead is collaborating with other organisations then the lead and at least one other partner must claim grant funding and enter their costs into the Innovation Funding Service.
Funding Costs
Up to £30 million has been allocated to fund projects across 2 competition strands:
The majority of the funding will be used in the deployment strand.
Under Article 25, the maximum grant funding amount an organisation can receive is €7.5 million for each project it is involved with.
For feasibility studies you could receive funding for your eligible costs of:
Experimental development (for an engineering study)
Under Article 25, the maximum grant funding amount an organisation can receive is €15 million for each project it is involved with.
For experimental development projects you could receive funding for your eligible costs of:
If your experimental development project qualifies as an ‘effective collaboration’ or widely disseminates knowledge, you could receive funding for your eligible costs of:
Your project must:
Exclusions
This competition is not funding: