LOWCAFF
LOWCAFF | |
Titre : | Low Carbon Future Fuels |
Budget : | 796 k€ |
Subventions : | FP7-PEOPLE (796 k€) |
Sous-programme : | FP7-PEOPLE-2009-IAPP Marie Curie IAPP transfer of knowledge programme |
Type de contrat : | Industry-Academia Partnerships and Pathways (IAPP) |
Début : | 1er juillet 2010 |
Fin : | 30 juin 2014 |
LOWCAFF est l'acronyme du projet européen Low Carbon Future Fuels, qui a pour référence sur le service CORDIS 251492[1].
Note : Les objectifs suivants sont repris de la fiche du projet sur Cordis
- Objective
There is an urgent requirement at the European and global levels for the development of low carbon transportation fuels as they have a key part to play in the enabling of sustainable mobility. The area is vitally important for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and the resulting climate change impact of transportation. This will be achieved by adopting a holistic approach which studies fuel design parameters and engine behaviour along with carbon sequestration technologies and green house gas life cycle analysis. This proposed industry-academia interchange tackles fundamental challenges in understanding mechanisms that will be key to unlocking future improvements in the development of low carbon fuels. Long-term collaborative relationships will be established between Shell, the coordinating host organisation and four partner universities - Aachen, CNRS (Orleans), Bologna and Imperial College. This will link their collective combustion and lifecycle CO2 scientific expertise directly with Shell s longstanding R&D capability in CO2 reduction technologies. In the first two years, university researchers will participate via secondments to multi-disciplinary R&D projects carried out at Shell.
An annual one-week workshop will bring together all the participants (research fellows, industrial and university supervisors, and a scientific advisory board), enabling new technical synergies to be established. Industry approaches to the commercialisation of knowledge will be conveyed to each university via the short term secondments of senior Shell researchers. To demonstrate commitment to a durable inter-sectorial collaboration, Shell will pay for the cost of the researchers' reintegration year and academia and industry will jointly develop and implement follow-on programmes of research. This will establish the platform for a lasting inter-sectorial collaboration.Les partenaires du projet
Coordinateur du projet
- Shell Research Limited - Londres (A pour pays coordinateur de projet européen::Royaume-Uni)
Partenaires
- Laboratoire réactions et génie des procédés - CNRS - Nancy (Lorraine, France)
- Alma Mater Studiorum - Universita di Bologna - Bologne (Italie)
- Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine - Londres (Royaume-Uni)
- Theinisch-Westfaelische Technische Hochschule Aachen - Aix-la-Chapelle (Rhénanie-du-Nord-Westphalie - Allemagne)
Financement
- Coût total du projet : 796 093 €
- Subvention de la Commission européenne (programme FP7-PEOPLE) : 796 093 €
Dates importantes
- Date de début : 1er juillet 2010
- Date de fin : 30 juin 2014
Voir aussi
Liens externes
- Le [ projet].
Notes
- ↑ La fiche du projet sur CORDIS