The Great Science Time Tour play presented by Tom Butterworth
(Image courtesy of Norwich Science Festival and Beth Moseley)
Thousands of schoolchildren across Norfolk have been "time travelling" this month to meet history’s greatest scientific minds, thanks to a major educational initiative funded by the Dudgeon Offshore Wind Farm.
The Great Science Time Tour, a high energy play produced for the 2026 Norwich Science Festival, has just completed a whirlwind tour of 38 primary and SEND schools across the county. The tour serves as a precursor to the main festival, which runs from 14–21 February 2026.
Performed by Tom Butterworth, the play takes young audiences on a "time-twisting adventure." Students have the chance to help Charles Darwin study his finches, say bonjour to double Nobel Prize winner Marie Curie, and blast into orbit with astronaut Mae Jamison.
Bringing the Curriculum to Life
The tour has received glowing reviews from local educators for its ability to blend humor with the National Curriculum. One Norfolk teacher noted:
“The delivery was spot on, exactly the right balance between scientific knowledge and making them laugh. The children loved seeing their friends on stage helping with the science experiments.”
Another teacher added:
“The play was pitched well and the scientists linked to our curriculum. The play was well written and carefully thought out, so each scene linked. It was great that Tom asked volunteers from the audience to help him - the children loved seeing their friends helping with the science.”
By the end of the Norwich Science Festival, it is estimated that over 6,000 people will have experienced the production.
Inspiring the Next Generation
The project is powered by the Dudgeon Offshore Wind Farm Community Fund, operated by Equinor. The fund provides £125,000 annually to support STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) initiatives across the county.
Sophie Skipp, Equinor’s Stakeholder Manager in Norfolk, attended a recent performance at Sheringham Primary School. She said:
“Today’s children are tomorrow’ s scientists and engineers. This play is a fantastic way to bring scientific achievement to life in a way that sticks with them. Reaching 38 Norfolk schools in just five weeks is a remarkable achievement, and we are proud to support it.”
As not all schools are able to travel to Norwich for the Science Festival, bringing the play directly to rural communities helps remove transport barriers and opens up opportunities for children to connect with science in an art-infused way.
See the Show at The Forum
For those who missed the school tour, the adventure continues. There will be 14 public performances of The Great Science Time Tour in the Lower Gallery at The Forum, Norwich, throughout the Festival week (14–21 February).
Note to Schools:
The Dudgeon Community Fund, administered by the Norfolk Community Foundation, remains open for STEM grant applications from schools and colleges in Great Yarmouth, North Norfolk, and Breckland. Applications are reviewed three times a year via www.norfolkfoundation.com.
About Equinor in Norfolk
Equinor is a long-term partner for Norfolk and has been an active member of the community for over a decade through the Sheringham Shoal and Dudgeon wind farms it operates off the Norfolk coast.
The Dudgeon Offshore Wind Farm is owned by Equinor, Masdar and China Resources Consortium, whilst Sheringham Shoal Offshore Wind Farm is owned by Equinor, a subsidiary of Equitix Offshore 3 Limited (co-owned by funds managed by Equitix and The Renewables Infrastructure Group (TRIG)) and Macquarie Asset Management (via Macquarie GIG Renewable Energy Fund 1).
On behalf of its partners, Equinor is maturing the proposed Sheringham Shoal and Dudgeon Extension projects. Following unitisation of the two, the Extensions project will double the capacity of the existing Sheringham Shoal and Dudgeon wind farms, providing renewable energy to power an additional 785,000 UK homes and making an important contribution to the UK’s decarbonisation goals.
Currently, the combined output of Sheringham Shoal and Dudgeon wind farms is sufficient to power around 710,000 UK homes, and the proposed extensions will increase that to nearly 1.5 million UK households.
Both wind farms have established community funds which in total have awarded over £2 million to projects in Norfolk. The funds were set up to provide grants to Norfolk community groups, including schools and charities, seeking financial assistance for projects or initiatives that meet key criteria and focus on renewable energy, marine environment and safety, sustainability, or education in these areas. During 2020, the funds provided grant funding to the Norfolk Community Foundation’s COVID-19 funding initiatives, and during 2021 grant funding has been made available to support Norfolk’s ‘every child on-line’ initiative.
Issue date: 16-02-26
Contact Details
For media enquiries, please contact:
Alice Baxter
UK Media Relations Manager, Equinor
abax@equinor.com
+44 7557973941
For consultation or community enquiries, please contact:
Nigel Tompkins, the Projects’ Community Liaison Officer based in Norfolk,
E-mail: nigel@ni4b.co.uk