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Tuesday, April 28, 2026

From Renewable Promotion to Defossilisation:

From Renewable Promotion to Defossilisation: A System-Level Gap in Energy Policy and Finance Ahilan Raman Managing Director Clean Energy and Water Technologies Pty Ltd (CEWT) April 2026 Executive Summary Australia has made significant progress in renewable energy deployment. However, fossil fuels remain structurally embedded in providing continuity and reliability. This highlights a critical gap: policy supports components, but not the system-level outcome of defossilisation. The Current Model Current frameworks focus on renewable generation, emissions reduction, and technology funding. While successful, they do not eliminate dependence on fossil fuels or system fragmentation. The Structural Gap Energy systems require continuity. Fossil fuels provide dispatchability, storage, and density. Renewable systems alone do not yet fully replicate these without additional layers. Fragmentation The transition is fragmented across generation, storage, backup, and carbon accounting, rather than forming a unified system. Carbon Blind Spot Carbon is treated as a liability. However, circular carbon systems could treat it as a recyclable carrier, enabling closed-loop systems independent of fossil inputs. Policy Opportunity Shift from renewable promotion to defossilisation. Enable integrated systems, align finance with outcomes, and support circular energy architectures. Conclusion The transition must move from scaling renewables to replacing fossil system functions. Defossilisation is the end state.

Sunday, April 26, 2026

The Missing Layer in Energy Transition

Clean Energy and Water Technologies Pty Ltd (CEWT) The Missing Layer in the Energy Transition Why Wind, Solar and BESS Alone Cannot Fully Decarbonise Heavy Industry 1. The Difference We Keep Ignoring Homes and businesses require flexible electricity. Heavy industry requires continuous high-temperature energy, molecular fuels, and uninterrupted operation. These are fundamentally thermochemical systems. 2. The Intermittency Constraint Industrial processes cannot follow weather variability. Stability, continuity, and reliability are non-negotiable. 3. The Scale Challenge Full electrification demands massive overbuild of generation, transmission, and storage. This is a system design challenge, not just a technology deployment issue. 4. Capital Flow vs System Need Investment is heavily concentrated in components—solar, wind, batteries—while integrated industrial solutions remain underdeveloped. 5. The Missing Layer Heavy industry depends on hydrogen as an energy carrier and carbon as a structural element. Ignoring carbon integration leads to incomplete decarbonisation pathways. 6. From Linear to Circular Systems Current systems extract, use, and emit carbon. Future systems must capture, reuse, and recycle it continuously. 7. CRT as the Integrating Layer Carbon Recycling Technology integrates renewable hydrogen with captured CO2 to create a closed-loop system, enabling continuous industrial operation with reduced emissions. Integration Perspective Wind, solar and batteries form the foundation of a clean energy system. CRT does not replace them—it integrates with them, providing continuity, carbon reuse, and industrial compatibility. Together they form a complete pathway.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Net Zero Accounting and System reality

Net Zero: Accounting vs System Reality • Why the next phase of decarbonisation requires system redesign • CEWT – Carbon Recycling Technology The Problem • We are solving a physical problem with accounting tools. • Balance does not change the system. What is Net Zero? • Net emissions = Emissions – Removals = 0 • Net Zero is a balance condition, not zero emissions. Accounting Model • Fossil → Energy → CO₂ → Atmosphere → Removal → Balance • External compensation model. Limitations • Relies on future removals • Emissions continue • Time mismatch • Global atmosphere vs local accounting. Physical Reality • Carbon is a flow between systems. • The problem is flow design, not balance. System Model (CRT) • CO₂ Capture → H₂ → Fuel → Energy → CO₂ → Re-capture • Closed carbon loop. Comparison • Net Zero: Linear, dependent on removals • CRT: Circular, internal loop, physics-based. Why It Matters • Energy demand rising • Supply intermittent • Reliability gap persists. CEWT Position • Hydrogen = energy • Carbon = carrier • Closed-loop architecture. Two Paradigms • Emit → Remove → Balance • vs • Capture → Reuse → Circulate Policy Shift • Incentivise system design • Reward closed loops • Focus on firm clean power. Closing • Net Zero balances carbon. • System design eliminates one-way carbon flow.

Why the Energy Transition is Stuck in Component Thinking

Why the Energy Transition is Stuck in Component Thinking We are not short of technology. We are stuck because we are solving a system problem with component thinking. We optimise electrolysers, batteries, carbon capture and renewables. Each improvement matters. But the system itself remains unchanged. Energy is not a collection of components. It is a flow system governed by thermodynamics — energy and mass must balance. Today’s system is linear: extract carbon, burn fuel, emit CO₂. We try to fix this with add-ons, offsets and partial substitutions. But the architecture remains the same. The real blind spot is closed-loop design. Nature operates in cycles. Carbon cycles. Water cycles. Balanced flows. Our energy system does not. Experts are not the problem. Structure is. Disciplines optimise their own layers: chemical engineering, power systems, economics. But no one owns the full system architecture. Finance and policy reinforce this. Assets are evaluated individually. Policies are fragmented into hydrogen, CCS and renewables. But real systems do not operate in silos. We don’t need more isolated innovation. We need system architecture thinking. That means asking different questions: Does this close the carbon loop? Does it provide reliability, not just generation? Does it reduce dependency on external inputs? The transition today is based on substitution. Replace fossil fuels. Offset emissions. But substitution keeps the same structure. The next step is defossilisation. Removing the one-way carbon flow entirely. History shows progress comes from system shifts, not component upgrades. The future of energy will not be defined by the best component. It will be defined by the best architecture.

Friday, April 24, 2026

HAVE WE LEARNED ANYTHING FROM HORMUZ?

HAVE WE LEARNED ANYTHING FROM HORMUZ? A System-Level Reflection on Energy Security, Sovereignty, and Design The Strait Is Not the Problem The Strait of Hormuz is not just a narrow passage of water. It is a mirror reflecting the structural fragility of the global energy system. Nearly 20% of the world’s oil passes through this chokepoint. One disruption can cascade across economies with price volatility and supply constraints. And yet, the response remains: secure more supply, diversify imports, build larger reserves. These are not solutions—they are symptoms. The Illusion of Energy Security Energy security has long been treated as a logistics problem: move fuel, protect routes, stabilise price. But a system dependent on continuous external fuel flows is inherently insecure—regardless of whether the fuel is oil, gas, LNG, or hydrogen. The Structural Blind Spot The global energy system is linear: Extract → Transport → Consume → Emit. This creates geopolitical exposure, economic volatility, and systemic instability. A Shift from Supply to System Design What if energy security is not about protecting supply chains—but eliminating the need for them? This means shifting from fuel supply chains to closed-loop energy systems. From Linear to Circular Energy Architecture Linear Model: Extract → Transport → Burn → Emit. Closed-Loop Model: Capture → Convert → Reuse → Repeat. Carbon becomes a recyclable carrier, hydrogen an enabler of circularity, and dependency is reduced. Energy Sovereignty Redefined True sovereignty comes when systems produce their own energy, recycle emissions, and operate independently of fragile supply chains. The Lesson We Keep Ignoring Hormuz is not the root problem. It is the symptom of a system designed around dependency. The Strategic Question Are we still trying to secure the old system—or ready to build a new one? Closing Reflection The future of energy will not be determined by who controls supply routes, but by who eliminates the need for them. Clean Energy and Water Technologies Pty Ltd (CEWT) Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT) – Enabling Closed-Loop Energy Systems