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Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Defossilisation: One System Concept, Multiple Solutions
Defossilisation: One System Concept, Multiple Solutions
For decades, climate change has been approached as a series of separate challenges:
• Decarbonise power
• Green steel and industry
• Electrify transport
• Build hydrogen infrastructure
• Improve energy efficiency in buildings
Each pathway is valid — but also adds complexity, cost, and fragmentation.
What if the problem is not the lack of solutions, but the way we frame it?
The Real Issue: Carbon Flow
Today’s system is linear:
Fossil carbon → Energy → CO₂ → Atmosphere
This single flaw drives emissions, volatility, and dependency.
The Solution: Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT)
CRT creates a closed-loop system:
• Capture CO₂
• Combine with renewable hydrogen
• Convert back into fuel
• Reuse continuously
Carbon becomes a recyclable carrier.
Where CRT Applies
• Power Generation – 24/7 zero-emission energy
• Steel & Industry – Stable high-temperature processes
• Transport – Net-zero fuels for aviation and shipping
• Buildings – Reliable heating via existing infrastructure
• Logistics – Decarbonised fuel systems
Why This Matters
• Climate: No net CO₂ emissions
• Energy Security: Local fuel production
• Infrastructure: Uses existing assets
• Economics: Reduced volatility
• Reliability: Continuous operation
Final Thought
The transition is not about changing the fuel.
It is about closing the loop that fossil systems left open.
Monday, April 20, 2026
Sunday, April 19, 2026
Seawater-to-Battery Sodium Platform
CAPZ (Controlled Advanced Purification Zone) converts seawater into battery-grade sodium feedstock. The process integrates nanofiltration, electrodialysis, ion exchange polishing, and evaporation/crystallisation to produce high-purity NaCl suitable for sodium-ion battery systems using Prussian Blue cathodes.
Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT): From Isolated Solutions to System Thinking
Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT):
From Isolated Solutions to System Thinking
By Ahilan Raman
Managing Director
Clean Energy and Water Technologies Pty Ltd (CEWT)
A Reflection from the Field
After studying a wide range of energy transition pathways — renewables, hydrogen,
storage, and carbon capture — one insight has become increasingly clear:
This is not a technology problem. It is a system problem.
Individually, many of these solutions are impressive. Collectively, they struggle to deliver
what modern economies actually require: continuous power, industrial-scale heat,
meaningful storage, and economic viability.
Where Current Approaches Fall Short
As deployment scales, structural constraints become evident: intermittency, storage
limitations, hydrogen challenges, and fragmented system design. Each solution addresses
part of the problem, but the overall system remains incomplete.
A Shift in Perspective
Instead of replacing the existing system, the question becomes: what if we redesign it?
Fossil-based systems historically delivered reliability, energy density, and continuous
operation. The flaw was the one-way carbon flow leading to emissions.
Introducing Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT)
CRT is built on a simple idea: recycle carbon instead of emitting it.
Renewable electricity produces hydrogen, which combines with captured CO₂ to form
renewable natural gas. This fuel generates energy, and CO₂ is captured again, forming a
closed loop.
Why CRT Stands Out
CRT is not an isolated solution but an integrated system architecture. It enables
dispatchable renewable power, continuous industrial heat, high energy density storage, and
minimal fossil dependency.
Not a Claim — An Invitation
This is not a claim that CRT is the only solution. But solutions addressing the full system
deserve deeper attention. The transition depends on integration, not isolation.
A Shared Journey Forward
For any solution to scale, it must be technically sound, economically viable, and broadly
understood. Perspectives from all audiences are essential.
Closing Thought
The transition is not about choosing between hydrogen or hydrocarbons, but about
designing systems that work in reality.
CRT is one such approach — not a final answer, but a meaningful step forward.
CEWT | Clean Energy and Water Technologies Pty Ltd
Advancing system-level solutions for a defossilised future
Saturday, April 18, 2026
From Carbon Pricing to Carbon System Design
CEWT POLICY NOTE
From Carbon Pricing to Carbon System Design
Rethinking how we address emissions at scale
Executive Summary
Carbon tax, credits, and penalties create important financial signals, but they operate after
emissions occur. Structural decarbonisation requires a shift toward system-level design where
carbon is circulated rather than emitted.
1. The Current Framework
• Carbon Tax – Direct pricing of emissions
• Carbon Credits – Offset-based mechanisms
• Regulation – Compliance-driven limits
All address emissions after they are created.
2. Structural Limitation
Modern systems follow a linear carbon model:
Extract ® Use ® Emit
Pricing mechanisms attempt external correction rather than internal redesign, leading to
incremental rather than structural change.
3. Why This Matters
Industrial systems require 24/7 reliability, energy density, and continuity—constraints that
pricing alone cannot solve.
4. The Shift Required
From Carbon Management ® Carbon System Architecture
Design systems where carbon is reused, not emitted.
5. Policy Direction
Short Term: Pricing + regulation
Medium Term: Infrastructure investment
Long Term: Closed-loop carbon systems
Strategic Insight
Carbon pricing treats emissions as a cost. System design treats emissions as a flaw.
Conclusion
The transition accelerates when we move from penalising emissions to redesigning the system
itself.
Clean Energy and Water Technologies Pty Ltd (CEWT)
Advancing system-level solutions for a defossilised future.
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