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Southern Water fined £330,000 after stream pollution killed 2,000 fish

A UK court has fined Southern Water £330,000 (US$416,748) for a raw sewage leak in July 2019 that killed almost 2,000 fish near areas designated to protect nature. An alarm alerted the company to an issue early in the day, but they failed to act, allowing the spill to last for as much as 20 hours.

Type: News

IChemE Matters: Introducing IChemE’s Young Engineers Awards for Innovation and Sustainability

IChemE are launching a trio of awards to showcase how young engineers are supporting the Institution’s vision of a more sustainable world

Type: Feature

History of Nuclear Engineering Part 1: Radioactivity

For just over 100 years, radioactive elements have proved of industrial and commercial use. Martin Pitt charts their emergence

Type: Feature

Nottingham Uni stroll to Frank Morton victory

Students from the University of Nottingham have overturned a near 40-year winless streak to return the coveted Frank Morton sports title back to the East Midlands.

Type: News

Electric avenue: researchers use electric fields to catalyse chemical reactions

WHAT if you could one day catalyse your industrial reactions with electric fields rather than the chemical catalysts commonly used today? It might be closer than you think after chemists at Kings College London successfully demonstrated the technique inside a microfluidic reactor.

Type: News

UK quits ‘climate-wrecking’ Energy Charter Treaty after efforts to modernise it fail

The UK government is leaving the “outdated” and controversial Energy Charter Treaty (ECT), an international agreement that allows fossil fuel companies to sue governments over net zero policies that threaten their investments.

Type: News

UKAEA and CNL announce tritium partnership as UK signs fusion agreement with Canada

THE UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) and Canadian Nuclear Laboratories (CNL) have announced a partnership to develop technologies related to managing tritium. The announcement comes alongside an agreement between the governments of the UK and Canada to strengthen collaboration in fusion.

Type: News

BHP, Rio Tinto, and BlueScope partner to decarbonise Australian steelmaking with electric melter pilot

AUSTRALIAN iron ore majors BHP and Rio Tinto have partnered with a leading steelmaker in the country, BlueScope, to investigate the development of an ironmaking electric smelting furnace (ESF) pilot plant.

Type: News

Wellcome commits £20m to increase representation of Black, Bangladeshi and Pakistani researchers

WELLCOME is launching a £20m (US$25m) funding drive to help tackle the underrepresentation of Black, Bangladeshi, and Pakistani researchers in UK science.

Type: News

The Economic Case for Hydrogen in Domestic Heating

Despite its thermodynamic disadvantages, global energy technology specialist Thomas Brewer believes hydrogen has an economic and efficient role in domestic heating. It forced him to deviate from his usual mantra of ‘efficiency above all else’ to get there, though

Type: Feature

Customer Viewpoint: IChemE Forms of Contract

IChemE’s The Blue Book provides a standard reference point for the engineering, procurement, and construction management (EPCM) contracting model. Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer’s Hannah Smith and Vanessa Medina explain why it could not have come at a better time

Type: Feature

Rules of Thumb: Distillation

Henry Kister, senior Fellow and director of fractionation technology at Fluor USA, presents 13 rules invaluable for distillation troubleshooting

Type: Feature

Liquid Metal: a Catalyst for Change?

Requiring temperatures into the hundreds of degrees to work, solid catalysts prove incredibly energy intensive. Kerry Hebden spoke to researchers at the University of Sydney who have developed a liquid metal alternative that could make the chemical industry greener

Type: Feature

Interactive Graph Resource for Chemical Engineering Design

Interactive graphs have the potential to provide students with a more dynamic and engaging learning experience. With that in mind, The University of Manchester’s Department of Chemical Engineering has produced an interactive set of graphs that can be easily embedded into any virtual learning environment

Type: Feature

Vendor Viewpoint: Unlocking Constrained Projects for a Greener Future

Decarbonisation must be the end goal for industry but getting there can sometimes be a source of frustration without capital investment. Could the zero capex model be the answer?

Type: Feature

Process Consulting and the Problem with AI-fed ‘Experts’

Grant Wellwood provides tips on how to discern between superficial knowledge and a deep understanding, as a new generation of AI tools further empower ‘the highest paid person in the room’

Type: Feature

Rocket Science: From the Mongols to the Moon and beyond

Rocket science is a famously difficult area, but it’s more than the physics of force and trajectories. Martin Pitt takes a chemical engineering view of its history

Type: Feature

IChemE Matters: A conversation with Congress

Ahead of the official call for nominations in March, representatives from Congress sat down to discuss why all eligible members regardless of experience should consider putting themselves forward

Type: Feature

IChemE Matters: Nominations sought for IChemE’s Board of Trustees and Congress

With the start of the 2024 election cycle nearly upon us, we will soon be seeking nominations for volunteers willing to get involved in two important bodies: The Board of Trustees and Congress

Type: Feature

AI put to work in push for rapid battery development

ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI) is helping slash the time it takes to develop batteries, with Umicore and a US state laboratory both making strides through separate partnerships with Microsoft.

Type: News