Darlington campus now a centre of excellence for future engines
For Cummins, Darlington is now a centre of excellence for future engines, including hydrogen internal combustion engines, with local teams having completed a governmentβbacked project to create the βDNA and architectureβ of a truckβsized hydrogen engine just waiting for full production. The work has delivered a mediumβduty engine architecture that can be scaled to heavy trucks and offβhighway machines, positioning the town as one of the UKβs most important hydrogen R&D hubs.
From his onβhighway product planning role, Miles Askew sees that achievement in the context of a fastβmoving market and an evolving regulatory landscape
βDarlington has really been the centre of excellence for the hydrogen engine work and we went through this 18 to 24βmonth governmentβfunded project with a consortium of businesses where the whole aim was to figure out what the genuinely novel technologies were for a hydrogen engine, how we put the building blocks together and how we take what we know from diesel and create a new kind of product that still feels familiar to operators.
βAt the end of that process we came out with the engine DNA and the architecture; we can show you how the system works, where the pipes run, how it integrates into a truck, but we havenβt productionised it yet because legislation and market demand arenβt quite in the place they need to be for a commercial launch.
βThereβs a strange tension at the moment where regulation doesnβt yet match what the market is pulling for and where the technology is capable of going, so you have this divergence around what the βrightβ product is. βFrom an engineering point of view, a hydrogen engine looks like a really straightforward way to decarbonise transport β thereβs no carbon in the fuel, so youβre starting with a zeroβcarbon energy carrier β but today the cost of hydrogen and the level of infrastructure youβd need mean it doesnβt yet stack up in a way that fleet operators are ready to jump on; so the technology is sitting there, proven on the dynos here in Darlington, waiting for the policy landscape and the economics to catch up.β
Miles is clear that the broader Teesside buildβout β from hydrogen linked to carbon capture to other emerging projects β could transform the regionβs fuel map, but he is pragmatic about where that first wave of molecules is most likely to go.
βHydrogen absolutely has a role to play in decarbonisation, and if you look around Teesside and the wider North East there are some very big industrial processes where it feels like a noβbrainer.
βYou think about steelmaking, about concrete and cement plants, about all the places where we burn huge amounts of natural gas, and hydrogen can often be a dropβin that lets you decarbonise those really intense processes without ripping everything up and starting again.
βThe interesting question then becomes: when weβve got a lot of hydrogen flowing in the pipeline, who gets priority and whoβs prepared to push the most for it?
βMy instinct is that the automotive sector β trucks and buses β may not be at the top of that list compared with big fixed industrial users, so even if we as an industry create a lot of hydrogen and we as Cummins can stand up a product that clearly works, we still need to see whether the market will actually go for it, and weβre very much in that watching brief at the moment to see how it pans out and when the tipping points arrive.β
That realistic tone sits alongside a clear sense of pride in what has already been achieved on Yarm Road.
βWhen you strip the jargon away, what the team here have done is design and build a truckβsized engine that runs on hydrogen, not some tiny lab prototype, and thatβs quite an astonishing thing for a plant in the North East of England to be able to say,β he adds. βYou start with a blank sheet of paper, you ask what the architecture needs to look like, what you do with fuel storage and air management and combustion, and then youβre lucky enough, as we are in Darlington, to have a springboard in the form of a worldβclass engine engineering team who can take that concept and turn it into hardware you can fire up in a test cell.β
One of the striking points in this account is that, for all the attention hydrogen attracts, Cumminsβ green strategy in Darlington is deliberately broader than any single fuel. The local engineering group has been working on a new βfuelβagnosticβ engine approach where core components can be configured to run on advanced diesel, gas, hydrogen and renewable fuels such as HVO (Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil), allowing fleets to decarbonise at different speeds.
Miles tells me: βLegislation always drives innovation, it always drives changes in product, and here in Darlington weβve been developing a new generation of engines to meet the next big emissions step (Euro 7) in 2029.
βWhen we were doing that, the original programme wasnβt about hydrogen at all, but we realised a lot of the building blocks β the base hardware, the combustion architecture, the control systems β could be used in different combinations, so we created this fuelβagnostic principle where we can pick and choose the right parts and construct an engine thatβs optimised for diesel, or gas, or HVO, or hydrogen, without having to design four completely separate platforms from scratch.
βAs I said at the recent BUSINESSiQ event with Ben Houchen, this isnβt all about hydrogen, because if you look at our new engine technology weβre making sure it can use sustainable fuels like HVO, where youβre taking waste products and turning them into a lowβcarbon fuel that can go into a modern engine.
βThose fuels are in the market today, they plug into existing refuelling infrastructure, and if we make sure our products can run on them robustly, we can drive significant carbon reductions across the fleet while hydrogen economics and infrastructure mature in the background.β
While hydrogen engines and fuelβagnostic platforms grab the technical headlines, an equally important part of Cumminsβ green story in Darlington is what is happening inside the campus away from the test cells. As environmental project manager, Jaime Mullis is responsible for the campusβwide projects that help deliver the companyβs 2030 and 2050 sustainability targets β from permits and pollution control through to energy, water and waste reduction.
βMy role is very much about the environmental projects that happen within the site boundary, so rather than focusing on the product that leaves the gate, Iβm looking at everything inside it that interacts with the environment and making sure it supports our 2030 goals and 2050 aspirations as part of Cummins Destination Zero Strategy,β he explains.
βThat ranges from managing the campus environmental aspects and impacts, permits and overseeing the siteβs environmental performance, to regulating air emissions from key processes such as painting. We also lead initiatives that reduce energy use, cut waste, and generally make the Darlington site as green and efficient as we can make it.
βAnything thatβs funded through that corporate environmental pot, I look after as a project, and weβve got some big schemes bubbling away in the background that will really help us get over the line on our targets.
βWeβre on track overall, and weβve already implemented some projects that have absolutely smashed the interim goals we set ourselves, which gives you confidence that if you keep backing the right ideas, you can move a big industrial site like this a long way, quite quickly.β
One of Mullisβ flagship successes is the switch from solventβbased to waterβbased paint across the engine lines, a project that was completed in late 2024 and audited by the council in early 2026. βWe installed the new waterβbased paint system in the fourth quarter of 2024 and itβs been running for about a year now, so weβve just been through an environmental permit audit with the council and the data from that is really encouraging.
βWhat itβs telling us is that weβve achieved around an 80 per cent reduction in VOC emissions from that process, which means we have already exceeded our 2030 target β that was set at a 50 per cent reduction β by a very comfortable margin simply by implementing this project.
βWeβve essentially removed solventβbased paint from all of the engines we produce here, with the exception of marine engines which run through a separate process, so itβs not a small pilot, itβs right at the heart of what we do.
βWhen you hit a 50 per cent reduction target six years early and actually deliver more like 80 per cent, it shows that the combination of corporate backing and local engineering knowβhow can deliver really big environmental gains without compromising the output that keeps people in jobs.β
βAlongside airβemission projects, water has been a major focus, with the campus already running a substantial rainwater harvesting system and looking to expand capacity.
βWeβve had a 50,000βlitre rainwater harvesting tank out at the front of the site for a number of years now and that feeds all of our shopβfloor welfare toilet facilities, so youβre talking about a really significant reduction in potable water use just from that one system,β Jaime explains.
βWeβve now secured additional funding to increase the capacity and add separate rainwater systems because, frankly, we get a lot of rain in Darlington and it feels like a waste if weβre not capturing and using as much of it as we sensibly can.β
The principle is simple but powerful.
βOn the engine plant side weβre using harvested rainwater where most of our water usage actually is, and we know that other parts of Cummins have put in even larger systems that feed things like coolingβtower topβups, so thereβs a lot of learning being shared.
βIt might not sound glamorous, but when you combine big tanks, smart controls and the good old North East climate, you can make a dent in both your water footprint and your operating costs, and thatβs exactly the sort of winβwin that keeps people engaged in the environmental conversation.β
For him, the green transformation of the Darlington site clearly goes beyond individual projects and into the bricksβandβmortar of the campus itself.
βWithin the boundary of the plant, what I can control is how green we are as an operation, so weβre looking at everything from the structure of the buildings and how we upgrade them, through to getting gas out of processes where itβs no longer needed and reducing the amount of waste that flows through the test facilities.
βWeβre working on the fabric of the offices to control heat loss, on systems that let us recycle the oil and coolant we put into engines, and on keeping as much as possible inβhouse so weβre not constantly buying fresh materials we donβt really need to be consuming.
βIt doesnβt feel like a compliance exercise where we tick a box and move on; itβs very much about building a sustainable way of operating that makes sense to the people who work here.
βSometimes when you talk about the environmental side people can switch off, but if you can say weβve saved this much money because weβre buying less energy, less fresh oil, less coolant, and by the way weβve also reduced our emissions and our waste, suddenly youβve flipped the conversation and everyone sees that being greener and being more efficient are the same thing.β
Behind the technology and the infrastructure is a workforce that increasingly sees Darlington as a place to build a career in the new energy economy, and Miles says the buzz is tangible.
βCummins is full of good people; we just seem to employ great people, and thatβs not just a line,β he says.
βBUSINESSiQ has already spoken to colleagues from the allotments and from other parts of the business, and there is a genuine ethos here about breaking boundaries, being quick enough to keep pace with the market and constantly pushing for new technology, whether thatβs in the product or in how we run the campus.β
Jaime, who admits he used to drive past the site without any real idea what happened behind the gates, says the scale of investment was a revelation.
βIβve been here about four and a half years and before I joined Iβd gone past this place hundreds of times without understanding what was going on.
βWhen someone mentioned the job, my first reaction was βdiesel enginesβ and I didnβt really know what that meant in practice, but once you walk around and see the R&D, the test facilities, the new Powertrain Test Facility and the money going into environmental projects, you realise itβs a really good place to work where theyβre always pushing for the next bit of technology and the next set of environmental targets, and that constant push to lower and then lower them again is actually very motivating.
βFrom the product side weβre always taking on apprentices and graduates, and weβve got a steady flow of students coming through the organisation, so the skills pool is there,β he tells me.
βBecause hydrogen and new power are relatively novel, weβve seen people move across from engines into new technologies and then sometimes transfer back again, bringing that knowledge with them.
βItβs worth stressing that hydrogen isnβt the only decarbonisation lever weβre pulling, especially because the economics and market pull arenβt quite there yet and the government has been pretty clear that it doesnβt see hydrogen as the main solution for decarbonising trucks in our region.
βThe EU takes a different view and says hydrogenβs zeroβcarbon status counts in its favour, but UK policy doesnβt line up with that, and if you tie that back to my role in product planning and strategy, we have a team here in Darlington trying to make global decisions in a world where regulation is diverging and sometimes not very firm. Whatβs good for vehicle operators isnβt always aligned to the pressure on vehicle manufacturers is another dynamic here.
βThe upside for the North East is that weβve got not just product development but global product strategy being done here in Darlington, so the region has a real voice in those conversations.β
Walk around the site today and it is clear that Cummins Darlington was never just an engine plant; it is a greenβenergy campus where hydrogen prototypes and Euro 7βready diesels share space with rainwater tanks and waterβbased paint lines, all underpinned by a skills pipeline that ties the town into the wider Tees Valley cleanβenergy story.
The key is to keep moving.