Agratas and the Faraday Institution partner on talent development for the UK battery sector

Published on
23 January 2025
Agratas and the Faraday Institution partner on talent development for the UK battery sector
Agratas and the Faraday Institution have signed a multi-year agreement to partner on talent development for the UK battery sector. As part of that commitment, Agratas, the Tata Group’s global battery company, has funded a pilot of three PhD studentships, with the PhD researchers embedded in Faraday Institution projects.
Demand for highly skilled workers to deliver ambitions for a fully electric future has never been more pressing. With shared goals to further the UK battery sector, this partnership brings together industrial ambition and need for talent, with the Institution’s expertise in developing researcher talent for the sector.
Since its inception, the Faraday Institution has delivered a bespoke PhD training programme, which equips doctoral researchers for careers in academia, industry or policy in the battery sector. PhDs emerging from the programme have deep subject area expertise, myriad of soft skills, and broad knowledge of the industry ecosystem in which they will work.
The PhD researchers being funded by Agratas are three of a cohort of 16 that commenced the Faraday Institution PhD Enrichment Scheme in October 2024. They join 85 PhD researchers who are currently undergoing or have completed the PhD training programme, with 100 more PhDs affiliated with Faraday Institution projects. The three, four-year studentships will include industrial internships at Agratas.
The three PhD studentships funded by Agratas are:
- Becky Larner, University of Oxford, is working with Professor Patrick Grant and Dr Guillaume Matthews on advanced manufacturing (as part of the Nextrode project).
- Chris Smith, University of Cambridge, is working with Professor Dame Clare Grey and Professor Michael De Volder on battery degradation.
- Tihana Štefanić, University of Oxford, is working with Professor David Howey and Professor Charles Monroe on the Multi-scale Modelling project.