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Sellafield failing to address ‘intolerable risks’, damning parliamentary report warns

MANAGEMENT of the Sellafield nuclear facility in Cumbria, UK is not responding quickly enough to “intolerable risks” at the site posed by ageing assets, a damning new report has warned.

Type: News

Young engineers call for more industry support at the 2025 YEAIS

Aniqah Majid joins the innovators competing to take home an IChemE award

Type: Feature

Viewpoint: The Green Hydrogen Reset

A wave of cancelled projects is forcing a rethink of hydrogen’s role in the energy transition – from universal fuel to niche industrial feedstock, writes Tom Baxter

Type: Feature

A new gallery celebrating engineers opens at the Science Museum

AN exhibition called Engineers opened today at the Science Museum in London dedicated to world-changing engineering innovations and the diverse and fascinating people behind them. I caught up with the engineers featured in the gallery and those who created it to ask what they hope it will achieve.

Type: News

The Spirit World

Can chemical engineering help spirits distillers close the loop between historic roots and modern modelling methods?

Type: Feature

Ban the Steam Engine and Build Ten Hinkleys

As products improve and prices fall, the take-up of petrol-electric hybrids and 'pure' electric vehicles (EVs) might come much sooner. Today’s ‘conventionals’ will become obsolete long before they’re banned.

Type: Feature

Careers in Chemical Engineering: Michael Wise

Yasmin Ali speaks to Michael Wise, Chemical Process Engineer at Worn Again Technologies.

Type: Feature

Finalists announced for carbon capture XPRIZE

TEN finalists have been announced in the NRG COSIA Carbon XPRIZE which is incentivising companies to develop new solutions for capturing CO2 emissions and transforming them to useful products.

Type: News

Green ammonia project set for launch in UK today

SIEMENS will launch a demonstration project in the UK today to showcase the potential of using ‘green ammonia’ for energy storage.

Type: News

Narrabri project receives environmental approval

SANTOS’ controversial A$3.6bn (US$2.64bn) Narrabri gas project has received environmental approval from the Australian Government, subject to conditions aimed at protecting regional biodiversity, groundwater, and local communities.

Type: News

Novel process for cost-effective biofuel recovery

RESEARCHERS at Imperial College London, UK have developed a cost-effective and energy-efficient process for extracting biofuels that could make them a viable alternative to fossil fuels for transport.

Type: News

Parties reach US$7.02bn settlement for fatal Brazil dam collapse

MINING giant Vale and Brazilian authorities have agreed on a global settlement of about R$37.69bn (US$7.02bn) to repair the environmental and social damage that resulted from the fatal collapse of a Vale dam in 2019.

Type: News

Researchers receive £1.3m to develop low-carbon energy storage for buildings

THE University of Nottingham, UK has received £1.3m (US$1.8m) for a project to develop a novel, low-carbon energy storage system to supply cheap, on-demand heat for houses and buildings in UK neighbourhoods. The technology could help decarbonise the building sector, while also addressing issues of fuel poverty and pollution.

Type: News

ExxonMobil to contribute US$10m to the Singapore Energy Centre partnership

EXXONMOBIL has announced that it will be contributing US$10m to the Singapore Energy Centre. The announcement was made on 31 October at Singapore International Energy Week 2018.

Type: News

Final report into 2019 PES fire released

THE FINAL report into a massive fire and subsequent explosions that took place in June 2019 at the Philadelphia Energy Solutions (PES) Refinery in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania has been released by the US Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board (CSB).

Type: News

Safety: Protecting Plants Against the Environment

Adam Duckett speaks to Steven Fitzgibbon about natural hazard risk reduction

Type: Feature

Jupiter Ionics announced as a finalist for the Spinoff Prize 2023

JUPITER Ionics, a spinoff from Monash University, Australia that aims to produce ammonia in a zero-CO2 process has been made a 2023 finalist for the Spinoff Prize. The competition was established to showcase academic entrepreneurs and their spinoff companies in the early stages of development.

Type: News

Denham and East Kimberley earmarked for green hydrogen facilities in Western Australia

WESTERN Australia’s push to become a major exporter of renewable hydrogen is rapidly gathering pace following plans for two new green hydrogen facilities: Denham and the East Kimberley clean energy project.

Type: News

US ammonia tanker spill kills five, injures seven

ANHYDROUS ammonia released from a tanker during a traffic incident in Teutopolis, US, is believed to have killed five people and hospitalised a further seven. Hundreds of residents were also evacuated as a precaution but were allowed to return home some hours later when it was determined the danger to the area had passed.

Type: News

Sweden’s green steel pilot project a success with commercialisation now underway

ENGINEERS have declared that their attempts to produce fossil-free steel have been successful and their industrial consortium will now press ahead with commercialising the technology. The team behind the Hybrit project in Sweden have produced a report outlining what has been learned during six years of pilot trials in what could prove a revolutionary phase in the decarbonisation of steel production.

Type: News