4-day IIT Madras Energy Consortium hosting Energy Summit 2023

The Indian Institute of Technology Madras’ (IIT Madras) Energy Consortium is hosting its annual Energy Summit at its campus, in which over 300 delegates from across the world are participating. The summit which would continue till December eight, features participation from global thought leaders and experts drawn from the industry, academia, policy makers and government agencies that are working towards accelerating the development of technologies to enable energy transition towards a low-carbon future. More than 300 delegates are taking part including over 40 international speakers representing Australia, UK, US, Italy, South Korea, and Japan, a release from IIT-Madras said on Wednesday. . Delivering a virtual address from Dubai on ‘Energy Transition Priorities in the US’ during the plenary session today, Dr. Bhima Sastri, Director (Energy Asset Transformations), Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management, Department of Energy, US, said “The US DoE Energy Earthshots initiative aims to accelerate breakthroughs of more abundant, affordable, and reliable clean energy solutions within the decade.” “Hydrogen shots seek to reduce the cost of clean hydrogen by 80% to USD 1 per 1 Kilogram in 1 decade”, he said, adding, Carbon management spans a value chain of technologies and infrastructure such as carbon capture, carbon dioxide removal, transport, conversion and permanent storage.

Dr. Bhima Sastri said, “The US Department of Energy is tasked with accelerating technology through four focus areas – Explore, align, accelerate, and collaborate – via the 17 labs across the country. Some of the outcomes include the ‘Sub-Surface guidance for oil recovery’ through machine learning and ‘Power Plant Cybersecurity.’ The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law allocated USD 12 billion for carbon management and more than USD 8 billion for hydrogen. This has given the opportunity to deploy technologies that have only been researched so far.” “The law has resulted in big investments in carbon management and critical minerals. For a long time, we have been depending on China for critical minerals in key technologies, like MRI. Now, we are trying to revive mines. Retired or retiring coal mines are being repurposed mostly for clean energy technologies”, he added. Making a major announcement during her address, Ms. Sarah Kirlew, Australian Consul General for Chennai, said, “With Australia being one of the earliest partners of The Energy Consortium, the next edition of the Energy Summit will be held at Australia next year (2024).” Ms. Sarah Kirlew said “Australia has natural gifts that allow the country to become a renewable energy superpower. In terms of the Australia-India partnership, renewable energy is a key focus. Australia and IIT Madras have deep collaborations through various MoUs. Many Australian companies have also set up their research centres, she said. The key summit themes for 2023 are Energy Storage and Green Hydrogen; Carbon Markets, Energy Economics and Climate Finance; Energy Efficiency, Energy Management and Modelling, Sustainable Buildings and Microgrids, Power conversion systems and Power electronics In his address, IIT-Madras Director Prof.V.Kamakoti said, “The Energy Summit must look at several challenges into the future. If a technology is introduced, how can it be scaled up, what will be the response and how it can handle disasters. IIT Madras is ‘IITM for all’ and we are open to any industry and stakeholder to join and collaborate with The Energy Consortium.” “Under the ‘Institute of Eminence’ (IoE) scheme, the Institute provided US$ 2 million to The Energy Consortium. Carbon Capture, Green Hydrogen and Battery Research (effectiveness and recycling) are all important areas along with zero emission trucking. In the next 10 years, recycling is going to become more important than even computing jobs”, he said.

The Institute is looking at such projects under our ‘Waste to Wealth’ agenda, he added. The important outcomes from Energy Summit 2023 include Launch of the CO2 capture demonstrator, to aid industries and researchers demonstrate technology scale-up; Increasing collaboration with more academic and industrial partners to address the technology transition for decarbonisation goals of the government and Launch of Energy Audit app for use by MSME, Energy auditors and other industries. A Special Magazine issue ‘Path to Decarbonization’, which comprises a series of articles by energy experts from academia, industry and government, was released on the occasion. A CO2 capture pilot demonstrator developed by the Energy Consortium as part of the Institute of Eminence Center of Excellence project was also unveiled on the occasion. There were also two high powered panels that deliberated ‘Alternate fuels and green H2’ and ‘Importance of Digitalization in energy transition’. multiple invited presentations, flash talks and posters on cutting-edge research from academia and industry were also presented on the occasion.