Today, the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management (FECM) announced up to $644,000 in funding for the University of Wyoming School of Energy Resources to assess the economic impacts of fossil energy production in Wyoming and evaluate opportunities and research needs to deploy clean hydrogen technologies. The study also will include direct outreach and engagement with local tribal nations and other traditionally marginalized groups to ensure that the study’s findings represent a diverse set of perspectives.
The December 2021 edition of the RWFI E-Note Monthly, the newsletter of NETL’s Regional Workforce Initiative, details deadline extensions for funding opportunities to establish a network of university-based, regional electric power cybersecurity centers.
NETL’s project partner Svante Inc. is rapidly scaling up a new sorbent and intensified process technology to capture carbon dioxide (CO2), a greenhouse gas, from power generation and industrial point sources that could significantly lower the capital investment needed to develop carbon capture plants at gigaton scale.
Learn about the latest developments in the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)/NETL Carbon Capture Program in this month’s edition of the Carbon Capture Newsletter.
The DOE/NETL Carbon Capture Program is developing the next generation of advanced carbon dioxide (CO2) capture technologies that can provide step-change reductions in both cost and energy requirements as compared to currently available technologies.
NETL’s geological and environmental systems (GES) research tackles the challenges of clean energy production by focusing on the behavior of natural systems at both the Earth’s surface and deep within the subsurface.
NETL Senior Researcher Sofiane Benyahia, Ph.D., was selected by the Particle Technology Forum of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) to receive this year’s prestigious Lectureship in Fluidization Award during the 2021 AIChE annual meeting. This award recognizes an individual’s outstanding scientific/technical research contributions with impact in the field of fluidization and fluid-particle flow systems.
Several NETL researchers will present some of the Lab’s recent groundbreaking geological and environmental systems (GES) research during the American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting, held in New Orleans, Louisiana, Dec. 13-17.
“As the nation transitions to a clean energy economy, technologies enabling carbon capture and storage (CCS) are becoming even more important,” said Ale Hakala, NETL senior fellow for Geological & Environmental Systems. “An important part of our GES work is making sure that these efforts are safe and reliable.”
In this quarter’s Research Associate Spotlight and Mentor Profile, up-and-coming environmental engineer Preom Sarkar discusses the important contributions she is making in collaboration with NETL experts to create more environmentally friendly methods of flue gas desulfurization (FGD).
Request for Information Will Guide the Selection and Management of Critical Climate Investments of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law
NETL researchers will share their internationally recognized geo-data science and artificial intelligence/machine learning (AI/ML) expertise through an invited talk and other sessions during the American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting, held in New Orleans, Louisiana, Dec. 13-17.