Looking for a used or new machine tool?
1,000s to choose from
Machinery-Locator
Hurco MPU XYZ Machine Tools MPU Bodor MPU Mills CNC MPU 2021 Ceratizit MPU

Machinery-Locator
The online search from the pages of Machinery Market.

MAZAK Variaxis i-500 5-Axis Vertical Machining Centre
With Mazatrol Matrix 2 Control. 
Year 2014. 
Ref 29776
With Mazatrol Matrix 2 Control. Year 2014. Ref 29776...
GM Machinery Ltd

Be seen in all the right places!

Metal Show & TIB 2024 Plastics & Rubber Thailand Intermach 2024 Metaltech 2024 Subcon 2024 Advanced Engineering 2024

Bangor University to become nuclear research site

Posted on 30 Oct 2020 and read 1022 times
Bangor University to become nuclear research site www.bangor.ac.uk Bangor University is to become a world-leading nuclear research site after a £3 million Welsh government investment in 15 new science posts.

The highly qualified jobs will be at the university’s Nuclear Futures Institute and have recharged the region’s nuclear ambitions after the disappointment of Hitachi’s pull-out from the Wylfa Two project.

The cash injection has been welcomed by NFI director Professor Bill Lee, one of the UK’s leading nuclear scientists (pictured). He said it will enable the university to expand its work in the nuclear field into medicine, control and instrumentation, structural materials and fusion energy, and that it could open the doors to further investment of hundreds of millions of pounds across North Wales as the region becomes one of the UK’s carbon-free energy hubs.

Mr Lee added: “If we are going to convert the whole country to electricity for transport and home heating by 2050 then we are going to have to double or even treble current capacity so we will need wind, solar, hydro and nuclear and we have them all here in North Wales – then you can wind down coal, gas and oil.”

The money for the new positions comes from the Welsh Government’s Sêr Cymru programme and the European Regional Development Fund and the university itself is also funding one additional post at the Institute.

Professor Lee, formerly at Imperial College London and one of the world's top material scientists, continued: "This support from the Welsh government and Europe gives us a real opportunity to put Bangor University at the heart of developments in low carbon energy.

“This is a great opportunity for North Wales, providing excellent research and training infrastructure along with a much more significant nuclear programme.

“It is a key benefit for North Wales that we have two licensed nuclear sites at Wylfa and Trawsfynydd and although Hitachi-GE pulled out of the Wylfa Newydd project there are ongoing conversations with other companies – that site will be used by someone.”

The NFI was set up in 2017 to focus on research into nuclear technologies in North Wales where nuclear energy has played a key role at Wylfa and Trawsfynydd and where the University and the M-SParc science park provide academic and industrial support.

The new investment will help NFI expand into the fields of nuclear medicine, using radio-active chemicals to diagnose and treat heart disease and many cancers, structural materials, to prevent radio-active leaks from nuclear reactors, and nuclear fusion.

Professor Lee concluded: “The new appointments will become part of a world-leading team supporting large regional projects funded through the North Wales Growth Deal such as the Low Carbon Energy Centre of Excellence at M-SParc on Anglesey. There are also significant projects such as the National Thermal Hydraulics Facility slated for North Wales in the Nuclear Sector Deal.

“There are a number of elements you need to worry about when developing the sort of capability we need here, including money and facilities but the most important is people and this investment in people gives Bangor a head start.”

Welsh Education Minister Kirsty Williams said: “I am pleased our Sêr Cymru scheme can support this programme at Bangor University, creating several high-quality jobs and strengthening the University’s research base even further.”