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7000 Students Set for Scottish Schools’ Hydrogen Challenge

By September 3, 2021 6   min read  (892 words)

September 3, 2021 |

Fuel Cells Works, 7000 Students Set for Scottish Schools’ Hydrogen Challenge
  • Scottish Pupils will have the opportunity to test drive the low-carbon fuel and learn more about the importance of green hydrogen in achieving Net Zero targets – with winners from each city competing in the grand final in Glasgow during COP26

Secondary school students across Scotland are taking part in a unique event in the run up to COP26 – designing, building and racing a green hydrogen-fuelled vehicle of their own design. Providing an engaging and hands-on educational experience for pupils aged 12-14, the Scottish Schools’ Hydrogen Challenge aims to engage with more than 7,000 young people throughout Scotland’s seven cities.

Tasked with working together in groups, the students will learn, collaborate and build energy efficient, hydrogen-powered scaled-down vehicles using LEGO components and real, miniature hydrogen fuel cells during two-hour workshops. Vehicles that travel the furthest on the zero-emission fuel will take part in a grand final in Glasgow during the COP26 climate conference.

Regional finals will take place in each of Scotland’s cities, with the top three teams from each advancing to Glasgow, with a chance to win a Lego Robot Inventor amongst other prizes. The first regional showpiece will take place in Inverness on September 3, where the best vehicles from across the Highlands will battle it out for a place to race at COP26.

The challenge is delivered by Arcola Energy, ITM Power and ScottishPower – a partnership formed to help educate people on the importance of green hydrogen in tackling the ongoing climate emergency.

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Barry Carruthers, Hydrogen Director at ScottishPower, said: “Scotland is about to host one of the most important climate summits ever, COP26, and we want to help bring some of the energy and excitement around COP26 to schools across Scotland with our partners Arcola Energy and ITM Power. The Hydrogen Challenge will help engage Scottish students in how green hydrogen can help decarbonise our daily lives by providing a clean fuel alternative to heavy industries and transport and supporting hundreds of green jobs.”

During the workshops, competitors will find out more about the decarbonisation of transport and the important role it is playing in reaching Scotland’s climate change targets. The Challenge also offers a chance for members of the community to learn about green hydrogen, its applications and its expected growth over the next decade.

Graham Cooley, CEO of ITM Power, said: “It is vitally important we work with young people as they grow up during the rapid shift to a net-zero economy. We are thrilled to be working with partners Arcola and ScottishPower, who are as passionate as we are about inspiring and upskilling a future generation of scientists and engineers. These hydrogen-fuelled vehicles are being built by the generation who will inherit the hydrogen technology that we at ITM Power are creating today. We hope to learn as much from them as they do from us.”

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Leading the delivery of the programme, Dr Ben Todd, CEO of Arcola Energy said: “Arcola Energy has delivered hands-on hydrogen education programmes to more than 100,000 students over the past 12 years, as part of our goal to deliver practical solutions to decarbonise transport, many examples of which will be on Scottish roads in the coming years. Based on real engineering principles, our workshops are delivered by our in-house team working with members of local universities and colleges who will be on hand to help teach students about green hydrogen and its applications – as well as offer a few hints and tips as they work to build their vehicles.”

The Challenge is being supported by the Scottish Cities Alliance and the Hydrogen Accelerator who have played a key role in the coordination of the challenge and helping to educate people on the role of hydrogen in decarbonisation.

Cllr. John Alexander, Chair, Scottish Cities Alliance, Leader Dundee City Council, said: “With COP26 just around the corner, there has never been a better time to engage our future leaders, engineers, economists and so much more about how important zero carbon fuel is.

“In the lead up to COP26, the Scottish cities are proud to collectively support this important programme to inspire the next generation of renewable energy engineers who can capitalise on the high skilled jobs we aim to create from our collective investment to position Scotland as one of Europe’s leading early adopters of hydrogen technology. Innovation is happening here and now across the Scottish cities in deploying these technologies at scale to play our part in meeting Scotland’s ambitious net-zero target by 2045, and putting the technology in the hands of young people is vital to ensuring that Scotland’s workforce of the future is best placed to reap the economic rewards as part of our just transition.”

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Professor John Irvine, Chair of the Hydrogen Accelerator at the University of St Andrews, said: “I am delighted that we are supporting this exciting Hydrogen Challenge programme, inspiring our young people to take up future careers within sectors such as hydrogen as it offers such a diverse range of fulfilling career opportunities. With the abundance of renewable energy and water here in Scotland we have the right ingredients to produce green hydrogen enabling not only the decarbonisation of the transport sector but the opportunity to create innovative solutions, supply chain growth whilst providing citizens with clean, green transport.”

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