What are the human factors and their potential impacts in the safe and effective operation of a new energy system and how can they be effectively understood?

Background

HSE Strategic Objective: Enable industry to innovate safely to prevent major incidents, supporting the move to net zero (https://www.hse.gov.uk/aboutus/assets/docs/the-hse-strategy.pdf)

HSE has a significant part to play in the safe delivery of the government’s commitment to achieve net zero greenhouse gas by 2050. Transitioning to a carbon neutral economy will see more innovative technologies and processes, which will present new risk. The scope of our research will underpin work to make sure that health and safety legislation does not prevent safe innovation and progress and will contribute towards enabling a safe transition across all industry sectors. We also understand that this is a phased change, and we continue to prioritise research to support maintaining our role in regulating the major hazards in existing energy industries.

To help manage risk, we will focus our attention on the breadth of activities that net zero encompasses. This will provide evidence to inform any policy, regulatory and operational changes needed to support key stakeholders.

To address the knowledge gaps we will adopt a broad approach including identifying and synthesising existing/developing evidence; influencing, fostering partnerships and collaborating with others; having the assurance frameworks to ensure that commissioned research is aligned to addressing the most prioritised knowledge gaps and is the optimum approach to deriving the evidence.
For some technologies, the level of interest, developments and activity is such that inter-related research activities necessitate coordination via a programme model. This is currently the case for the technological areas of carbon capture utilisation and storage (CCUS) and gaseous hydrogen. There is also significant activity in the battery technology area and alternative liquid fuels, particularly liquid hydrogen.

The questions provide more detail of the evidence needs within the main Areas of Research Interest Question Group.

Next steps

Get in touch: hsecsa@hse.gov.uk

Source

This question was published as part of the set of ARIs in this document:

HSE areas of research interest 2024

Topics

No topics assigned yet

Research fields

No research fields assigned yet

Related UKRI funded projects


  • Centre for Energy Systems Integration

    Energy systems are vitally important to the future of UK industry and society. However, the energy trilemma presents many complex interconnected challenges. Current integrated energy systems modelling and simulation tech...

    Funded by: EPSRC

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project focuses on developing a holistic modelling methodology for energy systems, which aligns with understanding human factors in new energy systems.

  • MASTER - Proposal for providing work to continue activity of the UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC) 2009 - 2014

    UKERC's over-arching aim is to provide, and communicate the outcomes of, high-quality energy research to inform the actions that government in the UK and other stakeholders must take to ensure that the energy sector move...

    Funded by: NERC

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project addresses whole systems research and knowledge exchange activities related to energy, partially relevant to understanding human factors in new energy systems.

  • UK Energy Research Centre Phase 3

    This proposal sets out a five-year programme of activities for phase 3 of the UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC). UKERC's main objective will be to conduct and synthesise independent research on energy systems that is aca...

    Funded by: EPSRC

    Why might this be relevant?

    The project focuses on conducting independent research on energy systems, which is partially relevant to understanding human factors in new energy systems.

  • EPSRC - Energy Research Senior Fellow

    Against the backdrop of increasing energy demands, the threat of climate change and the UK's dwindling fuel reserves, the challenge is to find reliable, diverse, sustainable, affordable, publicly acceptable and safe ways...

    Funded by: EPSRC

  • EPSRC/ESC Follow on Funding: Operationalising Socio-Technical Energy Transitions

    The implementation phase of the energy system transition has shown that ambitious decarbonisation strategies must not only encompass radical techno-economic change but also incorporate societal and political dimensions a...

    Funded by: EPSRC

  • Whole Systems Energy Modelling Consortium (WholeSEM)

    Energy models provide essential quantitative insights into the 21st Century challenges of decarbonisation, energy security and cost-effectiveness. Models provide the integrating language that assists energy policy makers...

    Funded by: EPSRC

  • Integrated Development of Low-Carbon Energy Systems (IDLES): A Whole-System Paradigm for Creating a National Strategy

    The long-term evolution of energy systems is set by the investment decisions of very many actors such as up-stream resource companies, power plant operators, network infrastructure providers, vehicle owners, transport sy...

    Funded by: EPSRC

  • ENSIGN: ENergy System dIGital twiN

    This Prosperity Partnership (PP) is a direct response to the growing local, national and international consensus that climate change should be treated as an emergency and that as a key part of this, the energy system mus...

    Funded by: EPSRC

  • UK Energy Research Centre Phase 4

    The UK energy system is changing rapidly. Greenhouse gas emissions fell by 43% between 1990 and 2017, and renewables now account for 30% of electricity generation. Despite this progress, achieving emissions reductions ha...

    Funded by: EPSRC

  • RESEARCH COUNCILS UK ENERGY PROGRAMME: ENERGY STRATEGY FELLOWSHIP

    This work has two principal aims: a) to develop a roadmap that will help the Research Councils and others to plan their research activities in ways that will contribute to the achievement of the UK's energy policy goals;...

    Funded by: EPSRC