Grant secured for groundbreaking solution to power problem

Fault Current Ltd (FCL), a Fusion IP portfolio company based at Cardiff University School of Engineering's Wolfson Centre for Magnetics, has secured a £635,000 grant from the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC). FCL is founded on the invention of Dr Jeremy Hall for a unique magnetic fault current limiter design that protects utility electrical distribution networks from unanticipated power surges. The initial concept was developed with an investment from Cardiff University's own proof of concept fund, the Cardiff Partnership Fund and financial support from the Technology Strategy Board. The DECC Energy Entrepreneurs Fund grant will enable Fault Current Limited to develop and test its next-generation fault current limiter for sale to distribution network operators and renewable energy generators. Deployed in an electrical network substation, a fault current limiter is a smart grid system component that can help protect the grid by absorbing the destructive nature of faults, extending the life of existing network equipment and allowing utilities to defer or eliminate costly equipment replacements or upgrades. Estimates from Europe and the USA suggest investing in smart grid technologies, such as fault current limiters, can save billions of dollars in replacement cost, increase safety, reliability and power quality. Peter Grant, Operations Director of Fusion IP said:  "This is a great example of a brilliantly simple idea being turned into a potentially world class product.
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