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Sunday, June 28, 2026
Holistic Process Engineering and Defossilisation: The Foundation of Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT)
Holistic Process Engineering and Defossilisation: The Foundation of Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT)
Holistic Process Engineering (HPE)
Holistic Process Engineering (HPE) is an engineering philosophy inspired by Nature’s integrated processes. It recognises that enduring natural systems are sustained through dynamic equilibrium, where matter, energy, and information continuously flow in balanced relationships.
Nature does not optimise isolated functions. Instead, it integrates multiple functions into coherent, self-sustaining systems. Photosynthesis is an outstanding example. A single biological process simultaneously captures solar energy, utilises carbon dioxide, releases oxygen, synthesises carbohydrates, stores chemical energy, and supports life. Sustainability is therefore not an external objective—it is an intrinsic property of the process itself.
Holistic Process Engineering seeks to learn from this systems architecture. Rather than optimising individual unit operations in isolation, HPE designs industrial processes as integrated systems that operate in harmony with the dynamic equilibrium of the larger natural systems upon which they depend.
Accordingly, sustainability is not treated as an additional design constraint or regulatory requirement. It is an inherent outcome of the process architecture.
Defossilisation
Defossilisation is a practical application of Holistic Process Engineering to the industrial carbon cycle.
Over geological time, Nature transferred carbon from the active biosphere into fossil reservoirs. Human industrialisation rapidly reversed this process by extracting and oxidising fossil carbon within only a few centuries. This created an imbalance between the rate of carbon extraction and the rate at which natural systems recycle carbon.
Defossilisation seeks to eliminate dependence on geological fossil carbon by maintaining carbon within a continuously recyclable industrial loop powered by renewable energy. Rather than treating carbon dioxide as waste, it is regarded as a valuable carbon feedstock that can be repeatedly recycled.
The objective is therefore not simply to reduce emissions, but to restore a dynamic equilibrium between industrial activity and the natural carbon cycle.
Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT)
Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT) is the first practical embodiment of the principles of Holistic Process Engineering and Defossilisation.
CRT captures carbon dioxide, combines it with renewable hydrogen to produce renewable synthetic methane, generates electricity, heat and cooling, and continuously recycles the resulting carbon dioxide back into the process. Carbon remains in a closed industrial cycle while renewable energy provides the energy input required to sustain the system.
Unlike conventional fossil-fuel systems, which transfer carbon irreversibly from geological storage to the atmosphere, CRT is designed to maintain carbon within a circular industrial pathway.
CRT therefore, represents more than a new energy technology. It demonstrates how industrial systems can be designed according to the principles of Holistic Process Engineering, where sustainability is an intrinsic property of the process rather than an external requirement.
In this framework:
Dynamic Equilibrium → Governing Principle
Holistic Process Engineering → Engineering Philosophy
Defossilisation → Carbon System Objective
Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT) → Practical Industrial Implementation
This progression provides a unified conceptual framework for developing future industrial systems that are technically robust, economically viable, and inherently sustainable.
Saturday, June 20, 2026
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Grid-Independent Trigen Plants for the Next Generation of Data Centres
Grid-Independent Trigen Plants for the Next Generation of Data Centres
The AI revolution is driving unprecedented demand for reliable power, cooling, and sustainable infrastructure.
Unfortunately, many data centre projects are now facing delays due to grid connection constraints, transmission bottlenecks, rising electricity costs, and increasing pressure to reduce emissions.
What if a data centre could become largely independent of the grid?
At Clean Energy and Water Technologies (CEWT), we are developing modular CRT-Trigen systems designed to provide:
✅ Reliable baseload power
✅ High-efficiency cooling for data centre operations
✅ Useful thermal energy recovery
✅ Carbon recycling and synthetic fuel production
✅ Reduced dependence on grid infrastructure
Our modular approach is being developed in capacities of:
• 20 MW
• 50 MW
• 100 MW
• Up to 150 MW and beyond
The system combines power generation, cooling, carbon capture, renewable hydrogen integration, and synthetic methane production within a circular carbon framework.
Unlike conventional systems that continuously consume fossil carbon, the objective is to recycle carbon within a closed-loop process. Natural gas is primarily used during start-up and transition phases, with the longer-term goal of operating on recycled synthetic methane produced within the system itself.
The result is a highly efficient Trigen platform capable of delivering electricity, cooling, and thermal energy from a single integrated facility while supporting the broader transition towards defossilisation.
As AI, hyperscale computing, and digital infrastructure continue to expand, the future may belong not only to bigger data centres, but to smarter, more resilient and more self-sufficient energy systems.
The challenge is no longer simply generating electricity.
The challenge is delivering power, cooling, and sustainability together.
#DataCentres #AI #EnergyTransition #Trigen #GridIndependence #Defossilisation #Hydrogen #CarbonCapture #CircularEconomy #Sustainability #CEWT
Sunday, June 14, 2026
Why Defossilisation Is the Only Long-Term Climate Solution ?
LinkedIn Article Draft: Why Defossilisation Is the Only Long-Term Climate Solution
For more than two centuries, humanity has benefited enormously from the energy provided by fossil fuels. Industrialisation, economic growth, modern transportation, and improved living standards have all been built upon the extraction and combustion of coal, oil, and natural gas.
However, this progress has come at a cost.
Since the Industrial Revolution, vast quantities of fossil carbon that had been safely stored underground for millions of years have been released into the active carbon cycle. The resulting greenhouse gas emissions have altered the Earth’s energy balance, causing heat to accumulate throughout the climate system.
Most of this excess heat has not remained in the atmosphere. The oceans have absorbed the majority of it, acting as a massive thermal buffer. Nevertheless, both the oceans and atmosphere are warming, glaciers are retreating, sea levels are rising, and ecosystems are experiencing increasing stress.
In my view, climate change is not simply an emissions problem. It is fundamentally a fossil carbon problem.
The continued transfer of geological carbon into the atmosphere is disrupting natural carbon cycles that evolved over millions of years. While renewable energy, energy efficiency, and carbon capture technologies all have important roles to play, they do not by themselves address the root cause of the problem.
This is why I believe the world must move beyond the concept of decarbonisation and embrace a broader objective: Defossilisation.
What is Defossilisation?
Defossilisation is the systematic elimination of dependence on fossil carbon extracted from geological reservoirs.
Rather than continually introducing new fossil carbon into the atmosphere, society must transition towards renewable and recyclable carbon pathways that operate within a closed-loop system.
In nature, carbon is continuously recycled through biological and ecological processes. Human industry, however, has largely followed a linear model:
Extract → Burn → Emit
This model is inherently unsustainable.
A defossilised economy would instead follow a circular pathway:
Capture → Recycle → Reuse
In such a system, carbon becomes a recyclable carrier rather than a disposable waste product.
Why There Are No Shortcuts
Many climate strategies focus on reducing emissions intensity, improving efficiency, or offsetting emissions elsewhere. While these measures may slow the rate of warming, they do not fully address the underlying dependence on fossil carbon.
As long as society continues extracting and consuming large quantities of fossil fuels, atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations will remain under pressure.
The challenge is therefore not simply reducing emissions, but ending the continual transfer of fossil carbon from underground geological storage into the active atmosphere–biosphere system.
The Path Forward
The energy transition should not be viewed solely as a transition from fossil fuels to renewable electricity. It must also include new approaches to carbon management, synthetic fuels, carbon recycling, and circular industrial systems.
Future generations will judge our success not by how efficiently we consumed fossil carbon, but by how effectively we learned to operate without relying upon it.
In my opinion, the long-term solution is clear:
We must systematically defossilise the global economy.
Only by ending our dependence on geological carbon and establishing circular carbon systems can we hope to restore long-term balance between human activity and the Earth’s natural ecosystems.
⸻
Ahilan Raman
Managing Director
Clean Energy and Water Technologies Pty Ltd (CEWT)
“Decarbonisation reduces emissions. Defossilisation removes the cause.”
Friday, June 12, 2026
CEWT;s CRT based Trigen for Data Centres
AI is transforming the world.
But there is one challenge that continues to grow alongside it:
⚡ Reliable, 24/7 power for data centres.
Most discussions focus on renewable electricity, batteries, and grid expansion. Yet hyperscale AI facilities require continuous power, thermal energy for cooling, and increasing levels of resilience independent of grid constraints.
At Clean Energy and Water Technologies (CEWT), we are developing a different approach.
Our Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT™) enables a closed-loop energy system where carbon is continuously recycled rather than extracted from fossil reserves and released into the atmosphere.
The concept is simple:
➡️ Generate electricity, heat, and cooling through a Trigeneration (Trigen) system.
➡️ Capture the CO₂ produced during energy generation.
➡️ Convert the captured CO₂ back into renewable synthetic methane using hydrogen.
➡️ Reuse the synthetic fuel within the same energy ecosystem.
In this model, carbon becomes a recyclable energy carrier rather than a disposable emission.
The result is a grid-independent energy platform capable of delivering:
✅ Continuous 24/7 power
✅ Process heat and steam
✅ District cooling and data centre cooling
✅ Energy resilience during grid disruptions
✅ Reduced dependence on fossil carbon extraction
✅ A practical pathway toward industrial defossilisation
We believe future AI infrastructure will require more than renewable electricity alone.
It will require integrated energy ecosystems that combine power generation, carbon recycling, thermal management, hydrogen, synthetic fuels, and intelligent energy recovery.
CEWT’s CRT™-Trigen platform has been developed with this vision in mind.
The future of data centres is not simply electrification.
The future is defossilisation.
#AI #DataCentres #EnergyTransition #Defossilisation #CarbonRecycling #Hydrogen #SyntheticFuels #Trigeneration #CarbonCapture #EnergyInfrastructure #CEWT #CRT
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