This is a fantastic opportunity for "Team Australia" to stand on the global stage and showcase Australia's low emissions technologies.
Applications close 31 July 2022.
CO2CRC member @NERAnetwork, is opening up opportunities for small Australian businesses with innovative low emissions technologies to take part in their national LETs Pitch program: https://t.co/XJiLXCL7no
Want to stay tuned to the latest? Subscribe to our 'CO2CRC Insights' newsletter to keep up to date on our latest collaborative research and resources by filling the form: https://t.co/ngqu1sSEmm
Our first newsletter for the year is out! Read about the latest research in low emissions technology, collaboration with our members and partners, access to resources and more by simply clicking below:
https://t.co/wYdF7MUYbo
#ccus#otwayinternationaltestcenter#netzero
CO2CRC along with its key research partners - CSIRO and Geoscience Australia, and funded by Beyond H2, are collaborating on pioneering research into the technical development of geological storage of hydrogen in Australia.
https://t.co/mUke1jICLV
#hydrogen#UHS#energytransition
We delivered the first major component of a hydrogen refining pilot plant to AGL’s Loy Yang facility in Victoria’s Latrobe Valley on Friday. The plant is part of a pilot project to deliver clean hydrogen to Japan from Victoria’s brown coal. Read more - https://t.co/mqZ3N4Zp03
At our CCUS Symposium Mark McCallum showed COAL21's commitment
to develop a commercial scale CCUS project in Queensland’s Surat Basin with a
final investment decision to begin construction of a $150m carbon capture plant
at the Millmerran Power Station scheduled for June 2020.
Sallie Greenberg discusses United States' initiatives to develop commercial scale geological storage of carbon dioxide from industrial sources at our CCUS Symposium.
Ziqiu Xue from Research Institute of Innovative Technology for the Earth, Kyoto (RITE) presents on microbubble CO2 injection on day two of the CCUS symposium.
"Victoria's Latrobe Valley contains one of the world's largest deposits of brown coal, and when used to produce hydrogen, it has the potential to meet Japan's energy needs for decades," said CarbonNet's Ian Filby at today's CCUS symposium.