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What to read while we’re away

WITH The Chemical Engineer team poised to close our laptops until the office reopens on 2 January, we thought we’d share a selection box of stories to catch up on while we’re away.

Type: News

A Chemical Engineer’s Festive University Challenge

Chemical engineer and science communicator Yasmin Ali sits down with Aniqah Majid to discuss the energy transition, her university days, and her upcoming appearance on this year’s University Challenge Christmas series

Type: Feature

UK chemical plants warned against ‘complacent’ safety standards as cold weather approaches

PLANTS handling hazardous chemicals should not be “complacent” to the risks associated with extreme cold weather, a safety expert has warned.

Type: News

UK unveils clean power plan to tackle ‘volatile’ fossil fuel market

THE UK has committed £40bn (US$50.5bn) to an ambitious clean energy plan to curb its “over-reliance” on fossil fuels.

Type: News

Rio Tinto agrees deal to build Western Australia copper mine with Japanese partner

MINING giant Rio Tinto has reached an agreement with Japanese company Sumitomo to build a copper and gold mine in northern Western Australia.

Type: News

Our Research Focus: Breathing Life Back into the Baltic Sea

Patricia Handmann and Anna Canning explain the BOxHy project, designed to sustainably combat coastal deoxygenation by valorising the oxygen from water electrolysis

Type: Feature

Greening the Dairy Industry

From methane reduction to water efficiency, David Pearce and Peter de Jong look at how dairy farmers and engineers are paving the way for a greener future

Type: Feature

Why You Shouldn’t be Afraid of Sales

Nigel Hirst argues that despite their wariness of sales roles, chemical engineers actually make the best technical salespeople

Type: Feature

Viewpoint: Embracing New GenAI-enabled Teaching

Far from replacing teachers, Christopher Honig says GPTs could blend learning and evaluation into seamless, dynamic experiences

Type: Feature

Switching to Green Energy in the Food Manufacturing Industry

How Robert Barrack and process engineering staff at Aurecon NZ provided their client with a concept to fully electrify their food manufacturing plant

Type: Feature

Glass In all its Glory: Part 2

Martin Pitt looks at the Industrial Age, which saw the mechanisation of glass manufacture, but also featured major chemical engineering developments

Type: Feature

Contributions and Resolutions

Adam Duckett on why the COP failure is an opportunity for engineers

Type: Feature

Kanga awarded Engineers Australia’s highest honour

MARLENE KANGA has been awarded the Peter Nicol Russell Memorial Medal, the highest honour given by Engineers Australia (EA).

Type: News

A virtuous circle? Fusion developers relying on power-hungry AI to accelerate commercialisation

FUSION energy development is locked in step with artificial intelligence (AI), according to the findings of a new survey into how companies are using it to rapidly iterate their technology.

Type: News

Pathways to Success? Assessing NESO Plans for Clean Power 2030

The National Energy System Operator (NESO) released its report last week on achieving clean power for Great Britain by 2030. David Simmonds looks at whether the plans are viable, will meet our future needs, and ultimately lower costs to the consumer

Type: Feature

Hundreds of schoolchildren visit IChemE to be inspired by chemical engineers

ICHEME has hosted more than 300 schoolchildren at its UK headquarters where they met with real-life engineers and took on engineering challenges, to inspire them about the prospects of a career in chemical engineering.

Type: News

NTU Singapore launching hybrid chemeng-chemistry course to fill skills gap

IN AN EFFORT to produce graduates with chemical engineering and chemistry skillsets, Nanyang Technological University (NTU) in Singapore is launching a new course in process engineering and synthetic chemistry.

Type: News

Statue of engineer Alice Kan unveiled to celebrate National Engineering Day

THE FIRST statue of a living engineer has been unveiled in London to mark National Engineering Day and inspire a new generation to join the profession.

Type: News

UK government to fund almost 5,000 STEM postgraduates

THE NEXT generation of UK scientists and engineers will receive a £500m (US$637m) funding boost from the government, which has committed to backing 4,700 postgraduate students.

Type: News

Site Inductions: Giving Visitors What They Need

Fed up with being bombarded with irrelevant information, Harvey Dearden says site inductions should be approached from the perspective of the visitor rather than as a company disclaimer “get out of jail free” card

Type: Feature

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