hard-to-abate sectors. With reflections on COP 29, she celebrates the wins and explains one of the biggest progresses will be around financial mobilisation within the private sector. Hennerkes ...
This challenge is particularly relevant for ‘hard-to-abate’ sectors like steel, cement and chemicals, which are energy-intensive and have hefty emissions. Ceramic manufacturing is an energy ...
India’s high-emitting, hard-to-abate sectors are responsible for 21 per cent of India’s emissions. The development of vast and stable renewable energy sources for industrial processing is still ...
The flight carried with it hopes that hydrogen – which gives off no emissions when it burns – could help decarbonise not only aviation but also other hard-to-abate sectors, such as steel or ...
Computing hears how reinforcement learning can make the hard-to-abate industries more energy efficient– with a potentially transformative impact on global CO2 emissions. Carbon Re aims to reduce ...
New research has found that while hard-to-abate industries, such as steel, shipping, aviation and chemicals, have made progress in reducing emissions, they remain off track to meet the global net-zero ...
The most prominent use of liquid hydrogen is for hard-to-abate heavy industries such as manufacturing of chemicals and fertilizer, cement and metals such as steel and aluminum. The hard-to-abate ...
Due to its ability to decarbonise hard-to-abate sectors such as heavy industry, chemicals, shipping and aviation, renewables-based or green hydrogen could play a pivotal role in limiting global temp.
This 7% is a clean-fuel niche for hard-to-abate aviation, ocean vessels, and cement and steel industries. Liquid hydrogen has two big advantages: one, the energy is contained in a dense form.