APC 14: developing the UK's low carbon automotive capability
UK businesses can apply for a share of up to £20 million for UK-developed late stage R&D, to support growth in advanced low carbon propulsion capability in the automotive sector.
- Competition opens: Monday 19 August 2019
- Competition closes: Wednesday 16 October 2019 12:00pm
This competition is now closed.
Competition sections
Description
The Advanced Propulsion Centre (APC) invests up to £30 million, 3 times a year, in collaborative research and development (R&D) projects. These are pre-production projects and must be match funded. In this round APC is investing £20 million.
APC 14 is looking for projects that support the UK’s long-term capabilities through securing long-term R&D investment. Or that can be achieved through its associated supply chain in the design, build and manufacture of zero tailpipe emission vehicles. Preferably projects will deliver both, to ensure the UK meets the future demand of vehicle-makers.
Projects which demonstrate a significant change in the reduction of carbon dioxide emissions and improvements in air quality compared to best in class are welcomed. This can include technologies such as motors, batteries, power electronics, hybridisation and alternative propulsion systems.
Your project must concentrate on the automotive market as its primary application.
This competition follows a 2 stage process:
- Online application.
- Interviews for successful applicants from the first stage.
Funding type
Grant
Project size
Your project’s total eligible costs must be 50% match funded and between £5 million and £40 million.
Who can apply
State aid
Any UK business claiming funding must be eligible to receive state aid at the time we confirm you will be awarded funding. If you are unsure please take legal advice. For further information see our general guidance.
Your project
Your project’s total eligible costs must be 50% match funded and between £5 million and £40 million.
Projects can last between 18 and 42 months.
If your project’s total eligible costs or duration fall outside of the above criteria, you must contact APC directly on +44(0)24 7652 8700 at least 10 days before the competition closes.
Lead organisation
To lead a project you must:
- have an active registered business base in the UK
- be a grant recipient
- involve at least one micro, small or medium-sized enterprise (SME)
- include, as part of your consortium, a vehicle manufacturer or tier 1 supplier who supplies parts directly to an original equipment manufacturer
- collaborate with others
- carry out the work in the UK
- intend to exploit the results from or in the UK
Academic institutions or research organisations cannot lead projects.
Project team
To collaborate with the lead your organisation must:
- be a UK registered business, academic institution, or research and technology organisation (RTO)
- carry out its project work in the UK
- intend to exploit the results from or in the UK
- work in collaboration with other businesses or research organisations
Non-UK based companies and research organisations are eligible to apply for funding if they:
- set up an active UK business base before they start their project, where the funded work will be carried out
- provide evidence that they intend to expand their R&D activity in the UK after the project
Your project can include partners that do not receive any of this competition’s funding, for example non-UK businesses. Their costs will count towards the total eligible project costs.
Previous applications
Funding
APC have allocated up to £20 million to match fund innovation projects in this competition.
The total grant request in your application cannot exceed 50% of the total eligible project costs, of which:
- at least 70% must be incurred by commercial organisations
- a maximum of 30% is available to research organisations, and if there is more than one research organisation, this amount will be shared between them
You must request the minimum amount of funding needed for your project.
The percentage of costs you can claim varies depending on:
- the type of research you are carrying out
- the type of organisations involved
- the outcome of a value for money (VfM) economic assessment carried out by the department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS)
For industrial research projects, you could get funding for your eligible project costs of:
- up to 70% if you are a micro or small business
- up to 60% if you are a medium-sized business
- up to 50% if you are a large business
For experimental development projects which are nearer to market, you could get funding for your eligible project costs of:
- up to 45% if you are a micro or small business
- up to 35% if you are a medium-sized business
- up to 25% if you are a large business
Your proposal
The aim of this competition is to seek proposals for collaborative R&D projects. These should demonstrate the development of on-vehicle technologies for on or off-road vehicles.
Projects must either accelerate the development of low and zero tailpipe emission capable technologies, or demonstrate a significant reduction in carbon dioxide emissions leading to air quality improvements. Proposals should clearly align with the UK’s Industrial Strategy and must clearly demonstrate how high value R&D will take place in the UK as a result of this funding.
APC is particularly looking for projects that support the UK’s long-term supply chain, associated capabilities and growth aspirations. This includes, improving productivity and competitiveness in the design, build and manufacture of low and zero tailpipe-emission capable vehicles.
This includes technologies such as:
- motors
- batteries
- power electronics
- hybridisation
- alternative propulsion systems.
Your project must support the growth of these technologies, creating more jobs and capability throughout the UK supply chain.
If your application can demonstrate a positive impact on the UK economy it will take priority. This can include projects that will make a major investment in:
- creating new supply chains supporting the transition to electrification and zero emission vehicles
- adding resilience to existing supply chains under a variety of circumstances (where applicable) such as low, medium, high production, niche, off highway, commercial or volume passenger vehicles etc.
- the delivery of a UK centric high value manufacturing and sourcing footprint
- lowering the overall cost of goods sold to customers
- joining together (simplifying) less productive or mature elements of existing UK supply chain leading to business efficiencies; helping to reduce uncertainty and risk.
- attracting new companies not traditionally delivering products, services or skills in automotive into the sector
- risk screening and due diligence to identify risks in the proposed supply chain developments
- improving the manufacturing readiness level (MRL) of your technology.
Your project can either focus directly on improving the MRL, or it can create manufacturing processes or supply chain enhancements that will lead to an improved MRL.
Your application must show:
- a clear route to market exploitation and have a consortium able to deliver this
- the economic benefits of the project, such as new and safe-guarded jobs, new business activity, or an expansion of products and services
- that the primary application of the project is for the automotive industry
- how the project will support upskilling and knowledge sharing in the UK
- that the project delivers impacts that would not be achieved in business as usual
- what would happen to the project if funding is not successful and why the specific amount of funding is needed
- how UK plc will benefit from any intellectual property generated by the project
- that you will demonstrate the majority of the technologies in a system or major sub system in a vehicle representative environment
We are looking to fund a portfolio of projects, across a variety of technologies (see ‘Specific themes’ section), markets, technological maturities and research categories.
We strongly encourage you to:
- demonstrate senior management commitment to the project and consortium
- ensure the consortium’s collaboration agreement is well advanced at the point of submission
- include the most important supply chain members in your consortium
- show how you will get disruptive technologies to market faster
- contact and work with organisations that are an important part of the supply chain but are not typically involved in R&D, such as tooling, manufacturing processes and materials
- focus on alternative propulsion systems which move the industry towards zero emissions, including hybridisation
- consider the possibility of technology transfer to and from other sectors into automotive
- focus on technologies that are identified in the Automotive Council’s roadmaps
- focus on lasting growth with the electric and electrified vehicle supply chain
- consider how to make results from this work public, where it helps share best practice while not damaging commercial interests
Read more about dissemination of your results in the Innovate UK funding rules.
Projects that focus on the significant reduction of carbon dioxide or improvement of air quality from advanced internal combustion engines, especially those using clean fuels, will also be considered. Projects focusing solely on clean fuels are out of scope.
As set out in the Industrial Strategy Automotive Sector Deal the UK is committed to deepening its supply chain presence for the sector. For internal markets, this means supporting the industry’s ambition to increase the level of UK content by value in domestically built vehicles to 50% by 2022.
This ambition is supported by the new National Manufacturing Competitiveness Levels (NMCL) programme. It sets out to deliver the government’s national supplier competitiveness and productivity improvement initiative.
Specific themes
The project must be directly focused on or relate to one or more of the following strategic technology themes. You must determine which technology or technologies best represent your project:
- alternative propulsion systems
- electric machines and power electronics
- energy storage and energy management
- lightweight vehicle and powertrain structures
- thermal propulsion systems that deliver substantial improvements
Research categories
Projects we will not fund
We are not funding projects focusing solely on the development of clean fuels only
- 19 August 2019
- Competition opens
- 20 August 2019
- Applicant briefing event
- 16 October 2019 12:00pm
- Competition closes
- 11 November 2019
- Invite to interview
- 20 November 2019
- Responses to questions and interview presentation submissions
- 2 December 2019
- Interview panel
- 20 January 2020 3:35pm
- Applicants notified
Before you start
You must read the general guidance for applicants before you start. It will help your chances of submitting a quality application.
When you start an application you will be prompted to create an account as the lead applicant or sign in as a representative of your organisation. You will need an account to track the progress of your application.
As the lead applicant you will be responsible for:
- collecting the information for your application
- representing your organisation in leading the project if your application is successful
You will be able to invite:
- colleagues to make contributions
- other organisations to collaborate with you
Interviews
If your written application is successful you will be invited to attend an interview, where you must give a presentation.
Before the interview, by the deadline stated in the invitation email, you must submit:
- a list of attendees
- your interview presentation slides
- written response to the technical assessors’ feedback
- written response to the BEIS economic value assessors’ feedback
You cannot make changes once these are submitted.
List of attendees
Agree the list with your consortium. Up to 9 people from your project can attend, ideally one person from each organisation. They must all be available on all published interview dates. We are unable to reschedule slots once allocated.
Presentation slides
Your interview presentation must:
- use Microsoft PowerPoint
- be no longer than 30 minutes
- have no more than 30 slides
- not include any video or embedded web links
You cannot change the presentation after you submit it.
Written response to technical assessors’ feedback
This must be a single PDF or Word document up to 10 A4 pages long.
Written response to the BEIS economic value assessors’ feedback
This must be a single PDF or Word document up to 6 A4 pages long.
Interview
Interviews will take place at the Advanced Propulsion Centre.
You must bring a mature draft of the collaboration agreement to your interview.
After your presentation the panel will spend 45 minutes asking questions. You will be expected to answer based on your application form, the assessor feedback from the written stage and your completed Value for Money spreadsheet. You may then be called back in for a further 15 minute question and answer session if needed.
Economic assessment
This is carried out by professional economists employed by BEIS, in both the written and interview stages. They assess whether the project is good value for money for taxpayers and the UK.
HM Treasury will only release grant funding if your project reaches an acceptable threshold of value for money. This analysis is quality assured by senior economists within BEIS to ensure the judgement is an accurate and independent reflection of the information that has been provided.
If you are invited to interview, economists from BEIS may need further information from you.
Report on economic outputs
As a condition of APC project grant funding, you must provide BEIS and APC with annual records which show the realised and expected economic outputs your project has produced.
You must provide robust, credible and timely data on your project’s progress. This data helps policymakers evaluate whether the APC programme is good value for money.
Each partner must:
- flag any information they consider too costly to collect
- agree report timings
- report on economic monitoring information annually, or at an alternative schedule agreed with APC, Innovate UK and BEIS
What we will ask you
The application is split into 3 sections:
- Project details.
- Application questions.
- Finances.
Project details
This section sets the scene for the assessors and is not scored.
Application team
Decide which organisations will work with you on the project. Invite colleagues and people from other organisations to help complete the application.
Application details
The lead applicant must complete this section. Give your project’s title, start date and duration. Is the application a resubmission?
Research category
Select the type of research you will undertake.
Project summary
Describe your project briefly, and be clear about what makes it innovative. Identify, using percentage splits, which sticky technology or technologies are the focus of your project. For example, an innovative motor technology with integrated power electronics and BMS could be expressed as
- alternative propulsion systems (0%)
- electric machines and power electronics (70%)
- energy storage and energy management (30%)
- lightweight vehicle and powertrain structures (0%)
- step change thermal propulsion systems (0%)
We use this section to assign experts to assess your application as well as for conducting a portfolio assessment. Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
Public description
Describe your project in detail, and in a way that you are happy to see published. Do not include any commercially sensitive information. If we award your project funding, we will publish this description. This could happen before you start your project.
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
Scope
Describe how your project fits the scope of the competition. The assessors will judge whether your application is in scope or not. If your project is not in scope it will not be funded. We will give you feedback on why.2. Application questions
The assessors will score your answers to each question out of 10 points. They will also give you feedback.
Do not include any URLs in your answers.
You can provide supporting evidence in an appendix for each question. Make sure it is additional information not covered in the application, such as data, charts, graphs and so on. Do not put anything in more than one appendix, and do not cross reference between appendices.
The questions are split into 4 parts:
- Business proposition.
- Project details.
- Funding and added value.
- Economic assessment, including value for money.
Part 1: business proposition
Question 1. What business opportunity does this project address? Your answer can be up to 600 words long.
Give a clear outline of the business opportunity. What does the project team need to do to address it within the proposed timeframe and cost? Describe the potential issues facing you and/or your potential customers and how the intended outputs of the project will address these.
You can upload supporting evidence for this question in a PDF named ‘Appendix 1’. It must be no larger than 10MB and can be up to 2 pages long. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.
Question 2. What is the size of the market you are targeting?
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
Describe the size of the market opportunities that this project might open up.
Describe:
- the current nature of the specific markets you are targeting. Give its geographical location, and possible export value
- the market dynamics, including its current size, and actual and predicted growth rates
- your strategy for targeting the projected market share, with justification in light of any potential competitors
Secondary cross sector exploitation outside of Automotive is encouraged.
If your technology is being purchased by an original equipment manufacturer (OEM) outside the consortium then give details on who the buyers will be. Submit any evidence of future purchasing commitments such as letters of support.
For highly innovative projects where the market may be unexplored, explain:
- what the route to market could or might be
- what the barriers to entry might be
- what the market size might be, making clear any calculations and assumptions
- how the project plans explore the market potential
You can upload supporting evidence in a PDF named ‘Appendix 2’. It must be no larger than 10MB and can be up to 2 pages long. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.
Question 3. How will the results of the project be exploited, in the end market and supply chain, and disseminated?
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
The highest marks will be given to projects that provide the strongest evidence on anchoring, growing or significantly improving the productivity and competitiveness of the UK supply chain.
List or describe the potential outputs of the project that can be exploited, such as:
- products or services
- processes
- applications
Describe how these outputs will be exploited by partners and organisations who are not project partners.
Describe or explain the benefits of these outputs to the UK’s supply chain including, where applicable:
- route to market, how your project will target commercialisation at the end
- how your project benefits the long term UK supply chain, during and after the project
- how it contributes to building a diverse and more resilient UK portfolio of supply chain assets which can meet commercial expectations
- delivering benefit for the automotive environment in a time of heightened uncertainty and complexity. For example how your project will develop multiple interventions across multiple segments of the supply chain
- reconfiguration of the value system
- how the consortium members leverage additional investment (and at what scale financially) in the UK supply chain,
- delivery of a lower cost of goods or improved value of the bill of materials, its sourcing location and the percentage split across these in the UK
- an advanced MRL. Define the MRL expected at the end of your project and by 12 months following project completion. Supporting evidence should be provided.
- when these impacts are likely to start and how long they will last for
- changes to business models and business processes
- other methods of exploitation and protection (IP and patents)
We will accept supply chains such as:
- long term high value supply chain, supporting serial production after the R&D phase, which could include the OEM or tier 1, component suppliers and raw materials
- service supply chain for manufacturing, which could include tooling, equipment or maintenance.
- supply chain supporting R&D phase, which includes prototypes, low volume products, test and validation, and engineering services
Provide a supply chain or value stream map in your supporting evidence. Use this to highlight, for example:
- potential suppliers
- gaps in supply chain processes required
- include companies and locations where known
Also consider how your project and outputs will be supported by supply chain risk prediction and management.
We accept that assumptions will be made for long term supply chains, and many of these companies will be outside of the project collaboration. You will benefit from letters of support if this project reaches its objectives.
You can upload supporting evidence for this question, including a supply chain or value stream map, in a PDF named ‘Appendix 3’. It must be no larger than 10MB and can be up to 3 pages long. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.
If you are invited to interview a score threshold (6 out of 10) will be applied to question 3. To be considered for funding your project must exceed this threshold.
Question 4. What impact might this project have inside and outside the project collaboration?
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
Identify, and where possible measure, the economic benefits from the project to those inside and outside the project. This could be in the form of productivity increases and import substitution. You could include benefits to customers, broader industry and the UK economy. Make a clear distinction between benefits inside and outside the project partners.
Identify, and where possible measure, any expected social and environmental impacts, either positive or negative, on for example:
- the number of jobs safeguarded, created, changed or displaced
- your ability to hire new employees, including where you will recruit from, how skilled the roles will be and th demand you expect for these roles
- education, upskilling or reskilling of your employees
- your UK-based competitors
- carbon dioxide emissions, beyond those mandated by regulation, broken down by each piece of technology where appropriate
- air quality improvements
- fuel savings, and how these will work for customers
- value-added benefits for the UK and/or the European Economic Area (EEA) and how long those benefits will last compared to the technology’s life span
- health and safety
- regulations
- quality of life
- the sourcing of materials, including a demonstration of the project’s commitment to corporate responsibility where possible
- government priorities
- sustainability
Where will you be located and why? Discuss the phasing of the project and of the intended manufacturing locations of the technology or technologies developed. For UK based manufacturing, justify why this would occur in the UK, and identify any expected regional impacts of the project. If you have any evidence of your intention for manufacturing in the UK, for example letters of intent, please include these in the appendix.
Where possible reference relevant studies, reports, data or previous projects.
You can upload supporting evidence for this question, including letters of intent, in a PDF named ‘Appendix 4’. It must be no larger than 10MB and can be up to 2 pages long. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.
Part 2: project details
Question 5. What technical approach will be adopted and how will you manage the project effectively?
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
Describe:
- the main work packages of the project, indicating the lead partner assigned to each
- your approach to project management, identifying any major tools and mechanisms you will use to ensure a successful project outcome
- your approach to managing the most innovative aspects of the project
- the management reporting lines
- your project plan in sufficient detail to identify any links or dependencies between work packages or milestones
- how your project will enhance the manufacturing maturity of the technology
- rival technologies and alternative R&D strategies, and how your proposal will offer a better outcome
You can upload supporting evidence for this question in a PDF named ‘Appendix 5’. It must be no larger than 10MB and can be up to 2 pages long. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.
Question 6. What is innovative about this project?
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
Identify the extent to which the project is commercially and technically innovative for example:
- whether it pushes boundaries over and beyond current leading-edge world science and technology whether it is looking to apply existing technologies in new areas
- why this project is not business as usual
- whether your innovation will produce a disruptive technology and what its impact will be
- demonstrate the increases in manufacturing productivity as a result of the success of this project
- highlight any potential import substitutions resulting from a successful project
- why and how you are confident that you have freedom to operate, and that your intellectual property is free from restriction and able to be readily exploited (provide evidence where appropriate of patents and IP)
- whether your innovation addresses any of the Automotive Council’s roadmaps’ research challenges
Highlight and explain the timeliness and novelty of the research aspects of the project in an industrial and/or academic context.
You can upload supporting evidence for this question in a PDF named ‘Appendix 6’. It must be no larger than 10MB and can be up to 2 pages long. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.
Question 7. What are the main technical, commercial and environmental risks to project success?
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
Please:
- identify the main risks and uncertainties of the project, including the technical, commercial, managerial and environmental risks
- highlight the most significant ones and provide a risk register
- explain how these risks will be mitigated
- list any project inputs on the critical route to completion, such as resources, expertise or data sets and implement gateways
- explain whether the output is likely to be subject to regulatory requirements, certification, ethical or other similar issues, and if so how you will manage this
Risks can include but are not limited to:
- funding gaps
- investment needed for production facility
- future sales risks
- carbon dioxide savings
- supply chain capacity and original equipment manufacturer purchasing
- sustainability
- disruptive technologies
- reliance on a technology upscale or performance
If you are planning to carry out any manufacturing in the UK, explain why and list any risks that might stop this happening. Describe the follow on investments needed and risks associated with achieving those investments.
You can upload supporting evidence for this question, including a risk table, in a PDF named ‘Appendix 7’. It must be no larger than 10MB and can be up to 2 pages long. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.
Question 8. Does your project team have the right skills, experience and access to facilities to deliver your project?
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
Describe:
- demonstrate key stakeholder buy in to ensure the project is successful
- the maturity of the agreements around project or project system target costs
- the benefits each partner brings to the project
- the current relationships between the project partners and how these will change as a result of the collaborative project
- what approach you will use to deliver a successful project, clearing showing the interdependencies between the partners and external parties
- the resources, equipment and facilities required for the project, and how you will access them
- any vital external parties, including sub-contractors, who you will need to work with to successfully carry out the project, explaining why these roles cannot be filled within the consortium
You can upload supporting evidence for this question, including details of the specific expertise and track record of each partner and subcontractor, in a PDF named ‘Appendix 8’. It must be no larger than 10MB and can be up to 2 pages long. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.
Part 3: funding and added value
Question 9. What is the financial commitment required for the project?
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
What is the anticipated project cost? Describe the level of contribution from any project participants and the level of grant funding required. Also give this information in the financial summary table in the application form.
Give supporting information and an explanation for project costs. It must be consistent with the category of research and development undertaken within each work package.
If the project spans more than one type of funding, for example, because significant work packages are in both fundamental and industrial research, you must describe and justify the breakdown of costs between them. For example:
- is the budget realistic for the scale and complexity of the project?
- has a realistic budget breakdown been provided?
- does the required financial support from APC fit within the limits set by the specific competition?
- have you demonstrated a financial commitment from other sources for the balance of the project costs?
- have any work package breakdowns been described and justified adequately?
Detail the total investment needed to bring the technology to production. Distinguish between the APC funded project and the overall investment. What is the proposed investment in R&D, skills, capital and training?
Describe and clearly quantify the return on investment that the project could achieve. Provide relevant source data references.
List and assign a proportion for the source of private sector investment by:
- retained earnings
- external debt
- equity investment or
- other source
Where the source is retained earnings, describe the decision making process in allocating this R&D spending. Is the R&D spending internationally competitive and/or found from UK company budgets?
You must declare any other public body funding, including any tax relief, that the consortium has applied for, or received, that relate to this project or application. Indicate the size of the funding, the relevant body, and details of the type of funding and conditions.
You can upload supporting evidence for this question in a PDF named ‘Appendix 9’. It must be no larger than 10MB and can be up to 2 pages long. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.
Question 10. How does financial support from APC and its funding collaborators add value?
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
Describe or explain:
- why this project cannot be funded internally or through other private sources, giving supporting evidence in the appendix of funding sources which were considered, including evidence of the outcome of these, for example proof of declined credit
- why this specific level of funding is required, giving supporting evidence in the appendix to this question, such as business cases, internal rate of return analysis or other comparison analysis of the project with and without APC funding
- what will happen if the application is not successful provide scenarios explaining what would happen with APC funding, not funded, delayed funding, reduced funding, and how this impacts on the UK.
- what alternative sources of finance have been sought by project partners and why these have been unsuccessful
- whether there will be additional R&D investment or spend as a result of this funding
- how successful delivery will increase total spend on R&D in the UK
- the collaboration benefits of the project including proximity, multiple sectors and work with other research organisations
If the project could not go ahead in the UK without APC funding, where would it be located and why?
Include information on:
- the current type and size of operations in these locations
- the expected size and growth of the local or regional market
- expected cost structure, including wages, building, transport, energy
- any existing infrastructure or financial support available
- the quality and availability of an equivalent workforce and science and research base in these alternative locations
- the potential to create value-added benefits for the UK and/or the European Economic Area (EEA)
- how long the value added benefits will continue for in terms of the technology’s life span
You may be asked for additional financial information relating to your bid or consortium members. This requirement will vary depending on the nature of the application and your specific argument for support. BEIS will decide whether to seek additional financial information and APC will communicate this to you.
You can upload supporting evidence for this question in a PDF named ‘Appendix 10’. It must be no larger than 10MB and can be up to 2 pages long. The font must be legible at 100% zoom.
Part 4: economic assessment including value for money
Your answer can be up to 400 words long.
Questions 11 to 16 of the application relate to the economic assessment and value for money. To answer these questions:
- download the value for money (VfM) worksheet from question 11
- complete tabs 11 to 16, following the guidance in the worksheet
- yellow cells are titles and should not be changed; enter data into the grey cells, and select an option from a drop-down list in the brown cells
- add extra rows in the jobs worksheet (in the middle of rows of input cells to preserve the formatting) so you can define jobs separately for each project partner for the required number of NVQ levels
- use blank lines to title project partners and group the jobs according to your preferences
- use each question’s notes section to demonstrate how your numbers have been derived
- upload the completed worksheet as an appendix to question 11
- complete questions 11 to 16 in the online application by giving any supporting information from the VfM worksheet, or write “Not applicable” if you have nothing to add
- you can upload supporting diagrams, pictures or graphics in a PDF appendix, up to 10MB in size, at question 16, clearly stating in its file name which question it is for
The worksheet is protected so data cannot be entered into incorrect cells. Yellow cells are titles and cannot be changed.
We define value for money, or cost benefit ratio, as the net economic benefit to the UK compared to the cost to the exchequer.
The net economic benefit to the UK consists of:
- R&D and innovation.
- Employment:
- newly created jobs
- safeguarded jobs
- indirect supply chain jobs
3. Wider benefits:
- carbon dioxide savings
- benefits to UK consumers, such as increased fuel savings
The value for money assessment does not include increased profits for consortium members.
We may not count benefits based on:
1. Additionality: to what extent would these benefits occur without government support? If you have not already included it in your response to question 10, provide supporting evidence in the appendix, such as business cases, internal memos showing decision making processes, cost comparisons for alternative locations, or other comparison analysis of the project with and without APC funding. The latter may include how APC funding would allow you to undertake the project differently (sooner, faster or on a larger scale) that would not occur otherwise.
2. Risk: what is the risk of the project not achieving the stated economic benefits? This depends on the:
- complexity of the project and consortium
- investment required
- risk management strategy
- technology itself
If you do not upload the completed spreadsheet your application will be ineligible.
3. Finances
Background and further information
Formed in 2013 the Advanced Propulsion Centre is a 10 year partnership between industry and government that will invest £1 billion to accelerate the development of low carbon propulsion technologies in the UK.
The government has committed £500 million to part fund projects over the 10 year period which is matched by industry funding for a variety of R&D activity. The 10 year timeframe provides a platform for long term investment and growth and will build UK capability through the research, development and industrialisation of these emerging technologies.
There is an opportunity for the UK in this emerging market and this funding partnership is an important part of the Industrial Strategy.
APC competitions are formally delivered in partnership between APC, Innovate UK and the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS).
APC will:
- Work with consortia to support bid development.
- Support the competition process, including hosting both launch and guidance events and interviews.
- Act as advocates for consortia to improve future competitions.
- Support project delivery once contracts are awarded, through APC staff.
- Act as a source of guidance for consortia during the critical project start-up phase, and while projects are running, through APC-appointed project delivery leads.
- Monitor the impact of the project portfolio.
Innovate UK will:
- Deliver the competition process and technical assessment framework.
- Support and manage applicant queries about the competition process.
- Issue and manage grant contracts.
- Provide formal assurance that projects are meeting their commitments once they are running (known as project monitoring).
- Approve financial claims and issue funds.
BEIS will:
- Assess the benefit that the proposed project will deliver to the UK economy, through value for money assessment. If that benefit meets an acceptable level and all other assessment criteria are met, BEIS will make a recommendation to ministers to support funding.
- Formally monitor delivery of economic outputs on an annual basis and after delivery of the project.
APC is able to help by:
- Providing general guidance regarding interpretation of competition rules and guidelines on an informal basis.
- Helping your consortium to structure the bid development process.
- Explaining common pitfalls.
- Answering questions regarding whether or not your project is within scope.
APC competitions are delivered by a partnership of the Advanced Propulsion Centre, Innovate UK (part of UK Research and Innovation) and BEIS.
Any information received by Innovate UK for this competition may be shared with APC and BEIS. Innovate UK has a data sharing agreement in place with these bodies which safeguards both personal and commercial data in accordance with data protection legislation.
Note that the APC role is to provide indicative guidance rather than formal advice. To contact APC email info@apcuk.co.uk or call +44 (0)24 7652 8700.
If you need assistance using the Innovation Funding Service, email support@innovateuk.ukri.org or call the Innovate UK competition helpline on 0300 321 4357 between 9am and 5:30pm, Monday to Friday.Need help with this service? Contact us