Hong Kong skyline at night

Four PhD students and post-doctoral researchers will be recruited as part of the six-year project called ‘Sail to Steam, Carbon to Green: Empowering Port Communities in the Global South'

30 April 2024

3 minutes

A £635,000 grant for a new project to learn lessons from past maritime energy transitions has been awarded to the Centre for Port Cities and Maritime Cultures at the University of Portsmouth.

The funding from Lloyd's Register Foundation builds on the Centre’s research into coastal communities and the international networks developed by the project team of Dr Melanie Bassett, Dr Rudolph Ng, Dr Karl Bell and Professor Brad Beaven.

Four PhD students and post-doctoral researchers will be recruited as part of the six-year project called ‘Sail to Steam, Carbon to Green: Empowering Port Communities in the Global South’. The doctoral programme will contribute to The Foundation’s Learning from the Past and Widening Participation in Maritime Heritage themes.

Centre for Port Cities and Maritime Cultures project team

The attached picture shows the project team (left to right) of Dr Melanie Bassett, Dr Rudolph Ng, Professor Brad Beaven and Dr Karl Bell in front of HMS Warrior in Portsmouth

The project contrasts how coastal communities in the Global South were impacted by energy transitions from sail to steam in the 19th century, and how the move from fossil fuels to carbon-neutral shipping will impact the same communities today and in the future

The students will explore how coastal communities have experienced technological, environmental and cultural change and what we can learn from the past to understand the challenges they face today. The first three-year phase of the project will focus on Macau in China and Callao in Peru.

Professor Jeremy Howells, Pro Vice-Chancellor (Research and Innovation) at the University of Portsmouth, said: “This funding from Lloyd's Register Foundation is a great endorsement of the excellent work by our Centre for Port Cities and Maritime Cultures. Studying the humanities and past energy transitions enables us to learn from the past. Such insights generate solutions that can be applied to today’s problems.

“As a university, we are committed to addressing such challenges worldwide and pride ourselves on our civic role at both local and global levels. We look forward to welcoming the doctoral students to Portsmouth.”

This funding from Lloyd's Register Foundation is a great endorsement of the excellent work by our Centre for Port Cities and Maritime Cultures. Studying the humanities and past energy transitions enables us to learn from the past. Such insights generate solutions that can be applied to today’s problems.

Professor Jeremy Howells, Pro Vice-Chancellor (Research and Innovation)

Alex Stitt, Director of Heritage and Education Centre at Lloyd's Register Foundation, said: “We are pleased to be working with the Centre for Port Cities and Maritime Cultures on this new six-year project to build on our Learning from the Past programme.  It is an exciting opportunity to demonstrate the past technological and cultural changes the Global South has experienced and how we can use those learnings to inform and influence future thinking.” 

The first two PhD scholarships will begin in October 2024 with two additional PhD scholarships starting in October 2027.

Find out more about the scholarships and how to apply at: https://www.port.ac.uk/study/postgraduate-research/research-degrees/phd/explore-our-projects/from-sail-to-steam-carbon-to-green-empowering-port-communities-in-the-global-south-peru-and-macau