The grant - called the Transport-Technology Research
and Innovation Grant (T-TRIG)
- is available for entrepreneurs and innovators
pioneering new ways of creating a better transport
system.
Issuing targeted investments of up to £30,000 for each
project, the fund aims to help start-ups and academics
propel their ideas to market quicker.
The Minister for the Future of Transport, , will launch
the competition at a roundtable with UK transport technology
businesses. George Freeman, said:
This government is committed to improving
the UK’s
transport network, from tackling air pollution to
fixing potholes for good.
We now have an exciting opportunity to stimulate the
brightest thinkers in our universities and small
business networks to try out novel solutions to fix
legacy problems across our transport system and
realise their visions for the future.
Schemes like this grant will ensure
the UK retains its
reputation as a world-leading innovator, and I
encourage early-stage businesses in the transport
sector to apply for the funds available.
Now in its 10th round of funding, government has
provided £4.6 million via this grant over the past five
years to more than 140 technology and innovation
projects, with successful winners
including Wayfindr and Flit.
Alex Murray, Managing Director and Co-Founder of e-bike
company FLIT, previous recipients of
the T-TRIG,
said:
Early support from the Department for Transport was
crucial for getting our first e-bike off the ground.
The grant allowed us to build our first prototype
with a specialist in Essex. We learnt an enormous
amount from this process, and these lessons have
carried over to the FLIT-16, the first folding e-bike
that we successfully launched through a crowdfunding
campaign in the summer of 2019.
Investment from this fund has often been a precursor to
funding from private investors, and over £25 million in
additional investment, largely from the private sector,
has been secured off the back of successful projects
awarded funding since the scheme began.
Nicola Yates OBE, CEO of
the Connected Places
Catapult, said:
We’re excited to be using our expertise to manage the
latest T-TRIG competition
for one of our key partners the Department for
Transport.
Early stage funding is a vital component to driving
great solutions from the drawing board to reality and
the areas covered in this competition, including
decarbonisation and accessible transport, are key
areas to tackle in the UK today. We’re looking
forward to working with the winners to
ensure T-TRIG leads
to tangible benefits for transport users.
The funding is a key part of the UK’s Future of
Mobility Grand Challenge strategy, which is
taking advantage of the extraordinary innovation
in UK engineering and
technology happening today to help the government
deliver better journeys for all.
Unique to this year’s grant, the competition has 3
themed elements: Decarbonisation, Age-friendly and
Accessible Transport, and Potholes and Resilient
Infrastructure, reflecting the Industrial
Strategy Grand Challenges and core issues
facing the UK’s transport network.