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Saturday, June 6, 2026

CEWT Concept Paper

# CEWT Concept Paper ## From Decarbonisation to Defossilisation ### A New Framework for Sustainable Energy and Industrial Development ### Executive Summary For decades, governments, industries, and international organisations have pursued decarbonisation as the primary pathway to addressing climate change. While decarbonisation has driven significant investments in renewable energy, hydrogen, batteries, carbon capture, and energy efficiency, global fossil fuel consumption continues to grow and atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations continue to rise. The fundamental limitation of current approaches is that they focus primarily on reducing emissions rather than eliminating dependence on fossil carbon itself. Clean Energy and Water Technologies (CEWT) proposes a complementary and broader framework: Defossilisation. Defossilisation is the systematic replacement of newly extracted geological carbon with carbon already circulating within the active carbon cycle. Rather than treating carbon as a waste product to be eliminated, defossilisation treats carbon as a reusable industrial resource that can be continuously recycled within the economy. This approach forms the foundation of CEWT's Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT). --- ## The Limitation of Current Decarbonisation Models Today's energy transition is largely based on the following sequence: - Renewable electricity generation. - Hydrogen production. - Battery storage. - Electrification of transport and industry. - Carbon capture and storage. While these measures reduce emissions, they do not necessarily eliminate dependence on fossil carbon. Modern economies remain deeply dependent on carbon-containing fuels, chemicals, plastics, fertilizers, construction materials, transportation systems, and industrial processes. As a result, fossil fuel extraction continues to play a central role in the global economy. Even renewable technologies themselves require substantial quantities of materials, manufacturing energy, logistics, and industrial infrastructure that are currently supported by fossil fuels. Decarbonisation therefore addresses the symptoms of the problem but does not fully address its root cause. --- ## Defossilisation: Addressing the Source CEWT defines defossilisation as: "The progressive elimination of newly extracted geological carbon from the economy by replacing it with continuously recycled carbon already present within the active carbon cycle." Under this framework: - Carbon is not the enemy. - Geological carbon extraction is the problem. - Carbon already circulating within industrial systems can be continuously reused. The objective is not a carbon-free economy. The objective is a fossil-free carbon economy. --- ## Carbon as a Recyclable Carrier A central principle of CRT is that carbon should be viewed as a recyclable carrier rather than a waste product. Conventional energy systems operate as: Fossil Carbon → Fuel → Energy → CO₂ Emissions Carbon Capture and Storage modifies this sequence to: Fossil Carbon → Fuel → Energy → CO₂ Capture → Storage Carbon Recycling Technology introduces a different model: Captured Carbon → Fuel → Energy → Carbon Capture → Reuse → Fuel In this architecture, carbon atoms remain within a managed industrial cycle rather than being continuously extracted and discarded. The carbon atom may exist in multiple forms, including: - Carbon dioxide (CO₂) - Carbon monoxide (CO) - Methane (CH₄) - Methanol - Synthetic hydrocarbons - Sustainable aviation fuels - Renewable natural gas While the molecular form changes, the carbon remains in circulation. --- ## Renewable Hydrogen as the Energy Source CRT recognises renewable hydrogen as the true energy input. Hydrogen provides: - Chemical energy - Reducing power - Fuel synthesis capability Carbon acts as the recyclable carrier. This distinction allows renewable energy to be stored, transported, and utilised using carbon-based fuels without requiring continual fossil carbon extraction. --- ## Why Defossilisation Matters Defossilisation offers several advantages: ### Energy Security Countries can produce renewable fuels from: - Renewable electricity - Water - Recycled carbon Reducing dependence on imported fossil fuels. ### Industrial Continuity Existing industrial infrastructure can be adapted rather than abandoned. This includes: - Gas turbines - Industrial boilers - Transport systems - Fuel distribution networks - Chemical production systems ### Circular Carbon Economy Carbon remains available for productive use while avoiding continual geological extraction. ### Global Scalability The concept can be applied to: - Power generation - Data centres - Steel production - Marine transport - Aviation - Industrial heating - Chemical manufacturing --- ## Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT) CRT is CEWT's practical implementation of the defossilisation framework. CRT creates a closed carbon loop in which: 1. Carbon dioxide is captured. 2. Renewable hydrogen is produced. 3. Carbon is converted into renewable fuels. 4. Energy is generated. 5. Carbon dioxide is recaptured. 6. The cycle repeats. Fossil fuels may be used only for initial commissioning and start-up. Once established, the objective is to sustain the system using renewable hydrogen and recycled carbon. --- ## Beyond Decarbonisation Decarbonisation remains necessary. However, CEWT believes that long-term sustainability requires moving beyond emission reduction alone. The next stage of the energy transition is defossilisation. By replacing continual geological carbon extraction with continual carbon recycling, societies can retain the benefits of carbon-based fuels while progressively eliminating dependence on fossil resources. --- ## Conclusion The future may not require eliminating carbon from the economy. It may require eliminating dependence on fossil carbon. CEWT's Carbon Recycling Technology provides a pathway toward that future by combining renewable hydrogen with continuous carbon recycling to create a sustainable, scalable, and globally applicable energy framework. Defossilisation represents a transition from a linear fossil economy to a circular carbon economy. In this vision, carbon is not waste. Carbon is a reusable resource.

CRT Power Technology – Strategic Positioning Summary

CRT Power Technology – Strategic Positioning Summary Core Concept Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT) is a carbon-recycling power technology in which captured CO₂ is continuously reused while renewable hydrogen provides the energy input. Carbon acts as a recyclable carrier rather than a waste stream. Fossil fuels such as LNG are required only for start-up and commissioning. Strategic Positioning Rather than presenting CRT as a conventional power plant with carbon capture and methanation, it can be positioned as a carbon-recycling energy system. The focus shifts from carbon disposal to carbon circulation. Key Message • Carbon is recycled rather than emitted. • Renewable hydrogen supplies the energy. • CO₂ is continuously captured, converted, reused, and recaptured. • LNG is used only as a start-up fuel. • The concept is applicable across multiple industrial sectors. Applications The same CRT architecture can be applied to: • Data centres and trigeneration systems • Industrial facilities • Utility-scale power generation • Steel production • Marine transport • Aviation fuel production • Other carbon-recycling energy systems Differentiation from CCS Traditional CCS follows the sequence: Capture → Compress → Store. CRT follows the sequence: Capture → Recycle → Fuel → Energy → Capture Again. The objective is not permanent storage of carbon but its repeated reuse within an industrial cycle. Patent and Technology Narrative The deeper scientific basis of CRT is that the carbon atom functions as a reusable carrier. The molecular form may change between CO₂, CO, CH₄, methanol, SAF, e-gasoline, or other carbon-containing products, but the carbon remains in circulation while renewable hydrogen provides the energy required to sustain the cycle. Commercial Vision CRT can be deployed as a modular platform integrating carbon capture, fuel synthesis, power generation, heat recovery, and industrial energy applications. The same core concept can be scaled from small pilots to large commercial installations.

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

The Missing Link in the Energy Transition

The Missing Link in the Energy Transition: Why Integration Matters More Than Individual Technologies For more than two decades, the global energy transition has focused on developing individual technologies to address climate change and energy security. Significant progress has been made in renewable energy, hydrogen production, carbon capture, ammonia synthesis, batteries, fuel cells, and synthetic fuels. Each of these technologies has demonstrated technical feasibility and commercial potential. Yet despite billions of dollars of investment, the world still faces a fundamental challenge: how to provide reliable 24×7 baseload energy while simultaneously achieving deep emissions reductions. This apparent contradiction raises an important question. If so many technologies are available, why has the core problem not yet been solved? The answer may lie not in the technologies themselves, but in the way they are being developed and deployed. Most are evaluated in isolation, whereas the energy system operates as an interconnected whole. Renewable energy provides low‑carbon electricity but is inherently variable. Batteries offer short-duration storage but become expensive for long-duration and seasonal storage. Hydrogen can store energy for long periods but requires conversion infrastructure. Carbon capture can reduce emissions but does not itself provide an energy carrier. Fuel cells efficiently convert hydrogen into electricity but depend on reliable fuel supplies. Ammonia and synthetic fuels offer transportable energy carriers but require upstream production and downstream utilisation systems. Viewed individually, each technology addresses part of the challenge. Viewed collectively, they reveal a systems-integration problem. Society does not need isolated solutions; it needs an energy ecosystem capable of producing, storing, transporting, and delivering energy continuously, affordably, and with minimal environmental impact. History provides many examples where transformative progress resulted from integration rather than a single breakthrough. The modern electricity grid combined generators, transmission systems, substations, controls, and end-use devices into a coherent network. The LNG industry required gas production, liquefaction, shipping, storage, and regasification. The internet emerged from the integration of computers, communications networks, protocols, and software. In each case, success came not from one technology but from the effective orchestration of many technologies. The energy transition may require a similar shift in thinking. Instead of asking whether renewable energy, hydrogen, carbon capture, batteries, or synthetic fuels can independently solve the problem, a more useful question is how they can be integrated into a unified system. Such a system would harness the strengths of each technology while compensating for their individual limitations. This perspective suggests that the future of energy lies in system architecture. The challenge is not a shortage of innovation; it is the need to connect innovations into reliable, scalable, and economically viable frameworks. Technologies that are often viewed as competitors may ultimately become complementary components of a broader solution. From this viewpoint, the central task of the coming decades is the creation of integrated energy systems capable of delivering dependable 24×7 power with near-zero emissions. The world may already possess many of the necessary building blocks. What remains is the engineering, commercial, and policy effort required to assemble them into a coherent whole. The lesson is simple: the energy transition is not merely a technology challenge. It is an integration challenge. The solutions that succeed will likely be those that combine generation, storage, fuel production, carbon management, and reliability into complete systems that serve society's real needs. In that sense, the future belongs not only to inventors of new technologies, but also to architects of integrated solutions.

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Core Concet of CRT

The Sun, sea and the wind are the energy sources in CEWT's Carbon recycling technology

CEWT Core Concept – Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT) The Sun provides the energy. The Wind expands the resource base. The Sea provides the resources. CRT closes the loop. Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT) is founded on a simple principle: work with Nature’s existing cycles rather than against them. CRT harnesses the Sun, the Wind, and the Sea as renewable sources of energy and resources. The Sun and Wind provide renewable electricity. The Sea provides water for hydrogen production and serves as a vast carbon reservoir through dissolved carbon dioxide. Seawater can also be used as a solvent to absorb and recover CO₂ emissions from industrial processes and power generation. In the CRT process: • Renewable energy from the Sun and Wind is used to produce hydrogen. • The Sea provides water for hydrogen production. • The Sea acts as a carbon reservoir through dissolved CO₂. • Seawater can be used to absorb and recover CO₂ emissions. • Captured carbon is recycled into renewable fuels and energy products rather than treated as waste. • Carbon remains within a circular system, reducing dependence on new fossil-carbon inputs. CRT transforms carbon from a waste stream into a recyclable carrier of renewable energy. Unlike conventional fossil-fuel systems, which transfer carbon from underground reservoirs to the atmosphere, CRT seeks to maintain carbon within a managed circular cycle powered by renewable energy. The result is a platform capable of producing: • Renewable Natural Gas (RNG) • e-Methanol • Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) • e-Gasoline • Dispatchable Renewable Power • Industrial Decarbonisation Solutions CRT is not simply a fuel technology. It is a carbon-recycling platform that integrates energy, water, and carbon management into a single circular system. It also helps to stop ‘Ocean acidification’ simultaneously. The Sun provides the energy. The Wind expands the resource base. The Sea provides the resources. CRT closes the loop.