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Digging Deeper

Glen Corder and Artem Golev look at the mining industry’s role in a circular economy

Type: Feature

QRA: Ten Golden Rules

Glenn Pettitt and Martyn Ramsden explain how quantitative risk assessment can be used to determine cost beneficial options

Type: Feature

Green process converts almost any carbon source into graphene

RESEARCHERS at Rice University, US have discovered a green process which can quickly and cheaply produce graphene from almost any carbon source, including coal, mixed plastic waste, biomass, and waste food. It could facilitate a reduction in the environmental impact of concrete and other building materials.

Type: News

Australia offers A$76.8m support for Portland smelter

AUSTRALIA’S Government has agreed to provide A$76.8m (US$59.5m) in funding in a bid to secure the future of Alcoa’s Portland aluminium smelter in Victoria. The move could help save 600 jobs and provide stability to the energy grid.

Type: News

CPI launches programme to support SMEs

CPI, an independent technology centre, has announced the launch of a programme aiming to support small- to medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in a wide range of sectors in the North East of England. The UK European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) has committed maximum funding in the region of £1.4m (US$1.9m).

Type: News

Evonik invests in 3D pharmaceuticals printing

EVONIK, through its corporate venture capital unit, has invested an undisclosed amount in Laxxon Medical, a US-based company which has developed 3D pharmaceutical printing technology that enables controlled release of active ingredients over time.

Type: News

Freeport LNG to remain offline until September

Freeport LNG, which shut down after a fire earlier this month, has announced that its Texas, US plant will be kept fully offline until September with only partial operation through year end due to the damage sustained in an explosion on 8 June.

Type: News

Henry Bessemer – Man of Steel

If the industrial revolution was built on steel, then the father of the industrial revolution was Henry Bessemer. It was the Bessemer process that made steel available in industrial quantities at an affordable price.

Type: Feature

Better by Design

Quality by design must be viewed as an opportunity, not as a regulatory burden

Type: Feature

Tune Your PID Loops!

Putting the ‘manual’ into automatic control

Type: Feature

How to Build a Self-Healing Plant

A future where plants will monitor, diagnose potential issues, and even schedule a fix is not far off – if we develop it correctly

Type: Feature

ExxonMobil to sell 50% stake in Bass Strait assets

OIL and gas company ExxonMobil is to sell its 50% stake in its Bass Strait oil and gas assets, off the coast of the Gippsland region in Victoria, Australia. The Australian reports that the deal could be worth A$3–4bn (US$2–2.7bn).

Type: News

Claimants to appeal fatal Samarco disaster ruling in UK court

THE Court of Appeals, the most senior court in England and Wales, has ruled to allow proceedings against BHP related to the fatal 2015 Samarco dam disaster to be reopened in the UK and allow appeal of the decision to strike out claims in the £5bn (US$6.9bn) case.

Type: News

UK Government awards £10m grant for first commercial cryogenic energy storage facility

HIGHVIEW Power, a cryogenic energy storage company, has received £10m (US$12.3m) from the UK Government for a 50 MW CRYOBattery facility (with a minimum output of 250 MWh), to help the country achieve its decarbonisation goals. It will be the UK’s first commercial cryogenic energy storage facility.

Type: News

Australia to invest A$539m in carbon capture and hydrogen projects

AUSTRALIA’s budget for this fiscal year will see it invest A$539.2m (US$416.6m) in hydrogen and carbon capture, use, and storage (CCS/CCUS) projects that will support industry, create 2,500 jobs, help cut emissions, and drive further investment.

Type: News

Production at proposed gigafactory put on hold until 2025

BRITISHVOLT, a startup which says it intends to “create a world-class battery cell ecosystem” and help build a domestic electric car industry at its £3.8bn (US$4.4bn) “gigafactory” in Northumbria, will now not deliver batteries for another three years due to soaring energy costs, its co-founder has said.

Type: News

UK Autumn statement offers boon to research but little news for industry

AMIDST tax rises and expenditure cutting amounting to around £50bn (US$60bn), funding for research and development is one of the few bright spots in an otherwise austerity-focused budget outlined by UK Chancellor Jeremy Hunt in his Autumn Statement

Type: News

UK government announces £75m nuclear fuel fund

UNDER plans to encourage investment in new and robust nuclear fuel production capabilities in the UK, the government has begun accepting bids on a £50m (US$60m) funding pot for projects it hopes will help “squeeze out” Russian reliance while creating more jobs and export opportunities.

Type: News

Solar-powered dryers and greener electric car batteries among £1m Earthshot winners

A BATTERY that uses a water-soluble binding composite to make it easy to recycle, and solar technologies to combat food waste, rural poverty, and gender inequality, were among the winners of this year’s Prince of Wales’ £1m (US$1.2m) Earthshot prizes.

Type: News

£4bn of contracts awarded for construction of UK CCS projects

ENGINEERING firms, including Costain and Wood, have been awarded contracts worth £4bn (US$5bn) to construct two CCS projects in Teesside. The projects involve building a world-first gas-powered power plant with the systems needed to capture its emissions and transport them offshore for burial beneath the North Sea.

Type: News