Latest News and Events

Call for R&D Proposals: UltraStore Aluminium – Aluminium Batteries for Low-Cost Long-Duration Storage

The Faraday Institution is now inviting researchers to apply to work on the initial candidate battery chemistry via the UltraStore Aluminium programme, a group of parallel 18-month projects that aim to produce an aqueous aluminium-based battery to fit the UltraStore programme’s goals. If successful, this could develop into a major breakthrough technology, opening TWh-sized markets.

Faraday Institution Community Awards 2026

Nominations for this year’s Faraday Institution Community Awards are open. Who do you value in the Faraday Institution community? Whose contribution should be recognised? What successes should we celebrate? Find out more & nominate someone today

Faraday Institution Conference 2026

Registration and call for abstracts now open! Join us from 8-10 September 2026 at University of Nottingham for what will be our largest and most open science dissemination and networking event to date.

Insight 23: Electrifying Freight: Battery-Powered Heavy Goods Vehicles

The Insight explores the role of the HGV sector as a significant part of the UK’s economy and the challenges of decarbonising the sector and proposes actions to develop and support the UK HGV industry.

UK Gigafactory Commission Report – Britain’s Battery Future

A cross-party commission has published a set of recommendations designed to secure Britain’s place in the global battery industry, safeguard the future of its automotive sector, and ensure the country remains competitive in a rapidly shifting international landscape.

Unlocking silicon’s promise: a novel process for making high-performance anode material

University of Sheffield spin‑out, AmpliSi, has developed a new process for producing porous silicon anode material that goes some way to overcome both challenges – opening a path to higher‑performing, and more sustainable batteries.

About the Faraday Institution

The Faraday Institution is the UK’s independent institute for electrochemical energy storage research, skills development, market analysis and early-stage commercialisation. It brings together research scientists and industry partners to work on projects with commercial potential that will reduce battery cost, weight, and volume; improve performance, efficiency, and reliability; develop scalable designs; improve manufacturing abilities; develop whole-life strategies; and accelerate the outputs towards commercial outcomes.

Read more about the Faraday Institution and our mission, vision and values.

Research Programme

The Faraday Institution research programme spans ten major research projects that bring together 25 UK universities, spanning a network of 500 researchers and 148 UK and 30 international industry partners to drive discovery in application-inspired research, working to solve some of the most challenging energy storage issues.

Strand 1: Materials Development to Pack Design and Performance

Projects within this strand harness world-class research to deliver advances in battery chemistries, materials systems, and engineered components by integrating advanced computational and experimental approaches to address challenges in battery performance, safety and reliability.

Strand 2: Sustainable Manufacture, Scale-up and Recycling

These projects target high impact areas to improve battery manufacturing cost, time and energy usage, by improving the fundamental understanding of key manufacturing processes including electrode manufacture. Research is embedding design-for-recycling principles into industry thinking and providing a UK EV battery industry with a pipeline of scalable rtechnologies.

Strand 3: Next-generation Technology Demonstrators and Transformational Challenges

These projects accelerate the real-world validation of breakthrough battery chemistries by bridging fundamental research and practical demonstration. This strand advances research into, for example, solid-state, lithium-sulfur and sodium-ion batteries, from laboratory concept to practical use. Transformational Challenges target energy storage applications with extraordinary impact potential where only conceptual solutions currently exist.

Read more about our research programmes.

Battery technology is critical to electrifying transportation and energy systems and thus it is an essential part of fighting climate change. The Faraday Institution’s programme is improving the technology in many significant ways, speeding its adoption, and opening economic opportunities for the UK."

Steven Cowley, Chair of the Board of Trustees

Our Impact

From research discoveries to commercial spin-outs, policy guidance to talent development and public engagement, the Faraday Institution and its research community is delivering impact – to UK science, battery commercialisation, the economy and future generations of researchers.

Our Team

The Battery Innovation Programme

The Battery Innovation Programme is a flagship of the UK Industrial Strategy, funded by the Department for Business and Trade and delivered by Innovate UK. It is driving research, innovation and growth across the UK battery manufacturing sector. With £452 million in government investment to 2030, the programme is building a stronger more connected battery ecosystem.  

Its mission is to commercialise cutting-edge UK technologies, support the clean industries of tomorrow, and strengthen the UK as a global launchpad for battery innovation – creating jobs and attracting long-term investment. It builds on the success of the Faraday Battery Challenge and its key delivery partners are the Faraday Institution (research), Innovate UK (business-led innovation) and UKBIC (scale-up). 

Get directions to The Faraday Institution’s Harwell Campus location.