- Royal Academy of Engineering MacRobert Award awards Bombardier the most prestigious prize in UK engineering, in its 50th anniversary year
- Innovative aircraft wing reduces the environmental impact of air travel
- Award presented by HRH The Princess Royal
The Belfast team behind an innovative, resin-infused advanced composite aircraft wing that minimises the environmental impact of commercial jets, has been named the winner of the MacRobert Award 2019 by the Royal Academy of Engineering.
Her Royal Highness The Princess Royal, as Royal Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, presented the MacRobert Award to the team of engineers from Belfast-based company Bombardier in the 50th anniversary year of the UK’s most prestigious engineering prize.
The winning Bombardier team members honoured at the Academy’s Awards dinner at London’s Banqueting House last night are: Mark Braniff, Head of Strategic Technology, Composites; David Patterson, Engineering Fellow, Aerostructures; Trevor Poots, former Chief Manufacturing and Tooling Engineer; David Riordan, Engineering Fellow, Engine Nacelle Design; and Sam Wilson, Senior Composites Specialist.
Profile: Bombardier carbon composite wing
Bombardier’s innovative, resin-infused advanced composite aircraft wing underpins the Airbus A220 and is the first certified commercial aircraft wing made using resin transfer infusion (RTI). The RTI process sees a complex structure created by placing dry fabric into moulds before impregnating it with liquid resin, which then sets into shape under heat and pressure. While other processes involve pre-impregnated carbon fibre requiring intensive refrigeration before manufacture, the RTI process uses less energy, fewer parts and results in a lighter wing. Compared to a conventional metal wing, Bombardier’s carbon composite wing is approximately 10% lighter helping to reduce fuel burn in flight, with an accompanying reduction of CO2 and NOx emissions.
The £520 million investment in Bombardier’s aircraft wing programme is the largest ever single inward investment in Northern Ireland and around 200 suppliers across the UK are directly involved with the programme alongside many others throughout the supply chain.
Bombardier was chosen from a shortlist of four finalists that included Darktrace, M Squared and OrganOx.
Founded in 1969, the MacRobert Award is overseen by the Royal Academy of Engineering and is the UK’s longest running engineering prize.
The Award honours the winning organisation with a gold medal, and the team members with a cash prize of £50,000. It recognises engineering teams that demonstrate outstanding innovation, tangible societal benefit and proven commercial success within the UK engineering sector.
Dr Dame Sue Ion DBE FREng FRS, Chair of the Royal Academy of Engineering MacRobert Award judging panel, said:
"The four finalists reflect the very best of UK innovation today, from mechanical, chemical, materials and optical, to medical and digital engineering. Each entry represents a significant advance in their respective fields and provides a glimpse of how engineering will shape the world over the next half century. They demonstrate UK engineering talent at the top of its game.
"Bombardier’s composite wing reflects how excellence in aeronautical engineering benefits both society and the environment. At a time of uncertainty for Belfast’s engineering community, we hope this award helps them achieve the world-wide recognition they deserve.”
Michael Ryan CBE FREng, Chief Operating Officer, Aerostructures, Bombardier Aviation, commented:
“Bombardier Belfast is thrilled to win the Royal Academy of Engineering’s 2019 MacRobert Award. It’s a fantastic recognition of our highly-skilled workforce, who have created a unique, cutting-edge technology to produce composite wings in Belfast which fly on commercial aircraft around the world. I’m extremely proud of our employees’ engineering innovation, the significant support of our supply chain, and of Northern Ireland as a global leader in aerospace technology.
“We’ve been developing our advanced composite expertise in Belfast for half a century and it’s an immense honour to receive the gold medal in the MacRobert Award’s 50th year.”
Baroness Vere, Aviation Minister, said:
“Bombardier’s innovative new wing is a worthy winner of the prestigious MacRobert Award for engineering innovation. We are committed to ensuring the future of aviation is cleaner and greener and the role industry will play is central to the UK achieving its sustainability goals.”
The four finalists for the 2019 MacRobert Award were:
- Bombardier (Belfast) for developing an innovative, resin-infused advanced composite wing that minimises the aircraft’s environmental impact by reducing both weight and fuel burn in flight, and waste during manufacture.
- Darktrace (Cambridge) for Antigena, an AI-powered ‘self-healing’ cybersecurity system that can both identify and neutralise cyberattacks.
- M Squared (Glasgow), whose SolsTiS Titanium:Sapphire laser produces the world's purest light and can be tuned across the spectrum - it is enabling new scientific discoveries and bringing about radical transformations in quantum computing, healthcare, navigation and climate change technology.
- OrganOx (Oxford) for creating the metra, a world-first device that can keep a human donor liver functioning outside the body for up to 24 hours prior to transplant.
Over the last 50 years, MacRobert Award winning innovations have changed the world, delivering enormous economic and societal benefit and contributing to the UK’s standing as the world’s eighth largest manufacturing economy.
The first award in 1969 was made jointly for two iconic innovations: to Rolls-Royce for the Pegasus engine used in the Harrier jump jet, and to Freeman, Fox and Partners for the Severn Bridge.
Other former winning innovations include:
- Allowing doctors to see inside the human body with the CT scanner invented at EMI (1972 MacRobert Award winner).
- Raising one of the world’s largest structures - the Millennium Dome, now the O2, engineered by Buro Happold (1999 MacRobert Award winner).
- Creating a computer the size of a credit card - Raspberry Pi (2017 MacRobert Award winner).
- Diagnosing cancer through a simple breath test - the ReCIVA breath biopsy developed by Owlstone Medical (2018 MacRobert Award winner).
ENDS
Notes to editors
MacRobert Award for engineering innovation
First presented in 1969, the MacRobert Award is widely regarded as the most coveted in the industry, honouring the winning organisation with a gold medal and the team members with a cash prize of £50,000. Founded by the MacRobert Trust, the award is presented and run by the Royal Academy of Engineering, with support from the Worshipful Company of Engineers.
Annual Awards Dinner 2019
This year’s Royal Academy of Engineering Awards Dinner took place at London’s Banqueting House on Thursday 11 July. Along with the announcement of the winner of this year’s MacRobert Award, the event also celebrated the winners of other awards and prizes including the Major Project Award, Silver Medal, President’s Medal, Rooke Award and RAEng Engineers Trust Young Engineer of the Year. The headline sponsor of this year’s Awards Dinner is Rolls-Royce, with additional silver sponsors BP and Lockheed Martin.
Royal Academy of Engineering
As the UK’s national academy for engineering and technology, we bring together the most successful and talented engineers from academia and business – our Fellows – to advance and promote excellence in engineering for the benefit of society.
We harness their experience and expertise to provide independent advice to government, to deliver programmes that help exceptional engineering researchers and innovators realise their potential, to engage the public with engineering and to provide leadership for the profession.
We have three strategic priorities:
- Make the UK the leading nation for engineering innovation and businesses
- Address the engineering skills and diversity challenge
- Position engineering at the heart of society
We bring together engineers, policy makers, entrepreneurs, business leaders, academics, educators and the public in pursuit of these goals.
Engineering is a global profession, so we work with partners across the world to advance engineering’s contribution to society on an international, as well as a national scale.
MacRobert Award 2019 Judging Panel
- Dr Dame Sue Ion DBE FREng FRS (Chair)
Consultant; Honorary President, National Skills Academy for Nuclear (NSAN)
- Naomi Climer CBE FREng
Chair of Council, International Broadcasting Convention (IBC); Former President Media Cloud Services, Sony
- Keith Davis
Former Chairman, The MacRobert Trust
- Professor David Delpy CBE FREng FRS FMedSci
Emeritus Professor of Biomedical Optics, University College London
- Professor Nick Jennings CB FREng
Vice-Provost (Research and Enterprise), Imperial College London
- Professor Sir John McCanny CBE FREng FRS
Regius Professor Emeritus, Electronics and Computer Engineering, Queen's University Belfast
- Professor Gordon Masterton DL OBE FREng FRSE
Chair of Future Infrastructure, University of Edinburgh; Former Vice-President, Jacobs
- Professor Ric Parker CBE FREng
Former Director of Research and Technology, Rolls-Royce
- Professor Sir Saeed Zahedi OBE RDI FREng
Technical Director, Blatchford