Glass Futures has appointed Italian glass engineers Stara Glass S.p.A to design its 30tonne/pd experimental Research & Development furnace – the core of Glass Futures Global Centre of Excellence being built in St Helens in the UK.
Stara Glass is part of the Hydra Group of companies which provides depth across the glass industry supply chain including equipment, construction, warm up, and R&D*. Based in Genoa, northern Italy, the Stara Glass team also has close ties with the city’s renowned university.
Stara Glass has confirmed it’s joining Glass Futures as an Affiliate Member to begin looking at technology development following the announcement that global drinks leaders Heineken and Diageo have also joined Glass Futures as Corporate Members.
The comprehensive procurement process, led by Glass Futures’ TSC** involving senior representatives from the global glass supply chain took several months looking through a number of excellent proposals before selecting Stara Glass to design the unique experimental furnace.
The 165,000 sq. ft Glass Futures’ Centre of Excellence is being built on a 14-acre site with the facility centred around a 30-tonne/pd low carbon demonstration furnace creating the world’s first openly accessible, multi-disciplinary glass melting facility. This will have provision for research and development trials to establish new manufacturing techniques, raw materials and improved efficiencies whilst decarbonising the glass industry.
Peter Liggett, Glass Futures’ Capital Projects Manager said: “Stara Glass represented the best technical fit for Glass Futures and they demonstrated considerable enthusiasm to work on this ground-breaking project. We are looking forward to working with Stara to ensure we have the very best R&D furnace to lead our innovation work.”
Ernesto Cattaneo, Head of Computing and Innovation Projects at Stara Glass, added: “Normally, a glass furnace is commissioned and it runs continuously, as any downtime means a huge loss in production and profit. That is not the case here.
“The Glass Futures’ furnace is a world first and will be designed with multi-functionality in mind. It will need to use different fuels such as methane, hydrogen, biofuels and electricity and have multiple test areas; it will be like a playground for glass engineers. There has never been anything like this before and that is what’s so innovative about Glass Futures’ vision for the industry.”
Glass Futures is a not-for-profit research and technology organisation building the £54m Global Centre of Excellence for Glass R&D, Innovation and Training in St Helens, in the north west of England.
The facility is set to connect the glass industry and academia to deliver exportable R&D and innovation, as well as training and up-skilling opportunities, ensuring glass making’s future is built on sustainable, recyclable, carbon-zero products.
With the required capital investment secured from industry, national, regional and local Government to support this ground-breaking facility, the company has also secured more than £8 million funding to progress a range of other cutting-edge R&D developments for the glass sector.
*research and development.
** Technical Steering Committee.
07.05.2021, Stara Glass / Glass Futures
Should the content or the design of these sites violate third parties rights or legal prescriptions, we kindly ask you to send us a respective message without invoice or cost. We guarantee that passages where the claim is considered as justified will be removed immediately, without any necessity to involve any lawyer into this issue. We will reject any claim caused by submission of a honorary note in this regard without any prior contact and confirmation of the issueby us and we reserve the right ssue counter claim ourselves because of violation of aforesaid conditions.