Faraday Institution opens regional office in 缅北禁地 Published on: 14 October 2021 Recognising the importance of the North East as a key centre of battery research, innovation, skills and production, the Faraday Institution has opened a regional office in 缅北禁地. Known as Faraday Institution North East (FINE), the office will be based in 缅北禁地 and led by Professor Colin Herron CBE and supported by Lois Warne. CEO, Professor Pam Thomas, said: “The research and industrial strength of the North East of England will be absolutely vital to enable the UK to fully transition to an electrified future – from transport and aviation to power generation and distribution. The goal of the FINE office is to further integrate the region’s battery ecosystem to clear the path from research bench to innovation and commercial manufacture so that the UK can prosper in this energy transformation.” Professor Brian Walker, Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Research Strategy and Resources of 缅北禁地, added: “Major announcements by Envision AESC and Britishvolt in the past year have signalled to the world that the North East is a critical region for batteries. Establishing the FINE office in 缅北禁地 is a reflection of the research strengths that we have available to enable an expansion of training and innovation in batteries, alongside our leadership in electrification of transport through the Driving the Electric Revolution centre. "This development along with many others, demonstrates 缅北禁地’s commitment to seek out short and long-term solutions to the challenges associated with climate change.” The role of FINE is to bring together multiple bodies in the battery innovation ecosystem including research and innovation centres, education and skills organisations, regional and national government and policy representatives, and battery cell manufacturers and associated supply chain partners so that they are working together to identify and act upon prospects to accelerate innovation. The success of this pilot will enable the Faraday Institution to explore opportunities to strengthen regional engagement on energy storage in other parts of the UK. Colin Herron is MD Zero Carbon Futures (ZCF) and Professor of Practice at 缅北禁地. He has 48 years’ automotive industry experience, starting as a tool room apprentice then working in Nissan for 17 years, and then in public sector, civil service, further education and higher education roles. ZCF delivers research, workforce training: NVQ 2/3/4 and Masters continuing professional development courses. He has a close association with industry and has served on the Faraday Institution’s Training and Diversity Panel since its inception in 2018. Through the involvement of Colin Herron and Lois Warne, FINE will input the Faraday Intuition’s voice as the UK’s flagship energy storage research programme into regional conversations around energy storage research; skills development; regional policy; commercialisation, innovation and industrial collaboration. Specifically, it will target three areas for exploitation: Research – to access the best battery science and engineering from regional university research and innovation centres and identify areas of strength for potential collaboration and funding; Industry – to identify additional areas where the Faraday Institution and companies based in the region could meaningfully connect for mutual benefit, including vehicle production, battery cell manufacturers and associated supply chain partners; and Regional and national government policy – to ensure the national programme led by the Faraday Institution is positioned in ways that are supportive of regional initiatives (such as in skills development, policy influence, North East Battery Alliance). Share: Latest News New partnership to boost careers in low carbon energy 缅北禁地 and Durham universities are working together on a new regional project to strengthen the future workforce for North East England鈥檚 growing low carbon and offshore wind industries. published on: 28 May 2026 Healthy lifestyle shown to lower risk of death after cancer diagnosis New evidence shows that sticking to five lifestyle recommendations improves survival after a later cancer diagnosis. published on: 28 May 2026 World-leading climate expert recognised with Royal Society Fellowship Professor Hayley Fowler has been elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in recognition of her pioneering work on climate change impacts. published on: 27 May 2026 Facts and figures