Map of Tyseley Energy Park
Map of Tyseley Energy Park, in Birmingham

British and German experts from industry and academia will create a new ‘Innovation Hub’ based in Birmingham to deliver new approaches to energy and waste management that will benefit cities and communities in China and around the world.

Energy experts from the University of Birmingham and Fraunhofer UMSICHT have renewed their Joint Research Platform set up in 2016 with plans to locate collaborative research in a new centre at the city’s Tyseley Energy Park.

Set to open in 2021, the Hub will link to the creation of a technology transfer centre in China in partnership with Jiangsu Industrial Technology Research Institute (JITRI), in Nanjing, and funded through Research England’s International Investment Initiative (I3) programme.

Birmingham Energy Institute (BEI) and Fraunhofer UMSICHT established the Joint Research Platform to combine academic expertise with industrial capability - addressing the practical challenges around energy and waste to get innovative solutions into action.

BEI Director Professor Martin Freer commented: “With our global community consuming more energy than ever before, the demand for energy is rising, yet this increasing demand is occurring at a time when climate change and the use of fossil fuels is a growing concern.

“In establishing the Innovation Hub, we’re looking to develop collaborative research programmes related to waste processing and recycling in particular the development of technologies capable of delivering biofuels.

“We will work with JITRI and Fraunhofer in helping to drive innovation and manufacturing progress, not just in China but around the world, as well as deepening still further the bonds between our sister cities of Birmingham and Nanjing.”

The partnership between BEI and Fraunhofer UMSICHT has been cemented through a series of new research programmes and development of a Thermo-Catalytic Reformer plant at Tyseley Energy Park. Thermo-Catalytic Reforming (TCR®) technology has been developed by Professor Andreas Hornung, Chair in Bioenergy at the University of Birmingham and Director of the Institute Branch, Sulzbach-Rosenberg, Fraunhofer UMSICHT.

Prof. Dr. Andreas Hornung, Director of Fraunhofer UMSICHT, Institute Branch Sulzbach-Rosenberg, commented: “Fraunhofer UMSICHT stands for the provision of high quality energy carriers and raw materials from waste. In extending our research cooperation with the University of Birmingham we hope to contribute our expertise in process engineering, especially in thermochemical conversion processes.

“We aim to to implement our solutions for the energy and raw material trasition all around the world. With this renewed international research partnership and its emerging links to China, we strongly believe to come a good step closer to this goal.”

BEI, Fraunhofer UMSICHT and JITRI recently announced their partnership in China to find global solutions for delivering recycling solutions and low-carbon clean energy and reducing the environmental impact of waste.

A five-year bridge connecting the sister cities of Birmingham and Nanjing with energy and raw materials experts in Germany will see researchers develop new technologies such as energy storage solutions – allowing renewable power to be available ‘on tap’ – as well as energy sources and biofuels created from waste.

  • For more information, please contact Tony Moran, International Communications Manager, University of Birmingham on +44 (0) 121 414 8254 or +44 (0)782 783 2312. For out-of-hours enquiries, please call +44 (0) 7789 921 165.The University of Birmingham is ranked amongst the world’s top 100 institutions, its work brings people from across the world to Birmingham, including researchers and teachers and more than 6,500 international students from over 150 countries.
  • The Birmingham Energy Institute is the focal point for the University of Birmingham, and its national and international partners to create change in the way we deliver, consume and think about energy. The Institute drives technology innovation and develops the thinking required to solve the challenges facing the global community as it seeks to develop sustainable energy solutions in transport, electricity and heat supply.
  • Fraunhofer UMSICHT, based in Sulzbach-Rosenberg and Oberhausen, belongs to Germany's Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, Europe's largest organization for applied research with 72 institutes and research units at locations throughout Germany and a workforce of 26,600 employees. Fraunhofer UMSICHT's research is focused on environmental technologies. It develops concepts and processes for direct application. Integrated process monitoring for efficient, sustainable and economical solutions are central to Fraunhofer UMSICHT’s work.
  • The Tyseley Energy Park has the potential to be a world leading demonstrator of waste processing technologies linked into a low-carbon energy generation system, linked to a low-carbon transport hub in one of the major UK cities.