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  1. newcastlehelix.com › stories › harnessing-the-heatNewcastle Helix

    16 de mar. de 2023 · Professor David Manning, Newcastle University, who is leading the consortium explains: “From the existing borehole we know that the temperature of the rock at 1600m beneath the city of Newcastle is approximately 70°C and this has the potential to be used as a source of heat for our homes, businesses and industry.

  2. 11 de dez. de 2018 · David Manning, professor of soil science at Newcastle University, said: “In this country we’ve been mining for over 2,000 years, even before the Romans in Cornwall we were trading tin to the Phoenicians. We need to take all that knowledge from oil and gas and take it across to geothermal so that we can run with that given it’s carbon free.

  3. PI: David Manning and FJ Gonzalez-Vila award £12k (named investigator, I wrote the grant) Engineering the soil carbon sink: a novel approach to carbon emission abatement. EPSRC EP/F02777X/1.

  4. View David Manning’s profile on LinkedIn, a professional community of 1 billion members. Visiting Professor at University of Salford now retired · Experience: University of Salford · Education: Cherry Orchard School Northampton UK · Location: Uppingham · 39 connections on LinkedIn.

    • University of Salford
  5. 1 de mar. de 2007 · 1 School of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK (e-mail: david.manning@ncl.ac.uk) 2 Search for other works by this author on:

  6. Education and Employment Experience 2004-2019 Lecturer/Senior Lecturer/Reader in the Environmental Engineering group at Newcastle University 2013-2017 Degree Programme Director Environmental Engineering MSc 2002-2004 Postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University 1999-2002 PhD student at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) 1998-1999 Environmental Consultant at Umwelt Consulting ...

  7. 31 de jul. de 2012 · Publishing their findings this month in the academic journal Science of the Total Environment, the project has been led by PhD student Carla-Leanne Washbourne and Professor David Manning, of Newcastle University in collaboration with Dr Phil Renforth in the Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford.