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Thursday, May 7, 2026
CRT for Data Centres
As AI and digital infrastructure continue to expand globally, the energy challenge for data centres is no longer just about electricity. It is about reliable power, cooling, thermal efficiency, and long-term sustainability.
Clean Energy and Water Technologies Pty Ltd (CEWT) is now exploring opportunities to support data centres in Australia and overseas through integrated trigeneration systems.
By combining:
• Electricity generation
• Process heat recovery
• Absorption chilling for cooling
CEWT aims to help data centres improve overall energy efficiency while reducing emissions and dependence on conventional grid-only architectures.
Our broader vision is to integrate advanced carbon recycling and circular energy pathways into future industrial and digital infrastructure.
As the industry evolves, system architecture and energy continuity will become increasingly important.
We welcome discussions with:
• Data centre developers
• Industrial parks
• Energy infrastructure partners
• Investors and strategic collaborators
#DataCentres #Trigeneration #EnergyTransition #Cooling #DigitalInfrastructure #IndustrialDecarbonisation #CircularEconomy #CRT #CEWT #Australia
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Monday, May 4, 2026
From Risk Management to System Design
From Risk Management to System Design:
A New Frontier in Climate Resilience
Ahilan Raman
Managing Director, CEWT
The Shift from Asset Risk to System Exposure
Climate-driven physical risks are no longer confined to individual assets. They now propagate across interconnected systems—supply chains, transport networks, and energy infrastructure.
This shift from asset-level vulnerability to system-level exposure is redefining resilience. Events such as floods, storms, and heatwaves now create cascading disruptions across operations and value chains, ultimately impacting financial outcomes.
The Current Approach: Managing and Pricing Risk
Most organisations focus on mapping exposure, quantifying financial impacts, and prioritising resilience investments.
This improves capital allocation and insurance alignment, but remains reactive—assuming the underlying system remains unchanged.
The Next Step: Reducing Risk Through System Design
As systems become more interconnected, optimisation alone begins to plateau.
A new question emerges: What if resilience is achieved by redesigning systems so that risk is structurally reduced?
This represents a shift from responding to events toward shaping the system itself.
Architecture as a Financial Variable
System design becomes a capital allocation decision. The focus shifts from when to act, to what system we operate in.
Engineering, risk modelling, and finance converge, with system architecture determining the nature and magnitude of risk.
Implications for Energy Systems
Energy systems are highly exposed due to interdependencies and sensitivity to climate impacts.
While asset hardening and redundancy remain important, a complementary approach is to adopt architectures that inherently reduce exposure.
Toward System-Embedded Resilience
The next frontier is System-Embedded Resilience—where risk is not only managed but designed out of the system.
This shifts systems from fragile to adaptive, from exposed to buffered, and from reactive to structurally resilient.
Conclusion
Climate risk thinking is evolving from awareness to quantification to financial integration.
The next step is clear: from managing risk to designing systems where that risk is structurally minimised.
Resilience becomes a function of how systems are conceived, built, and operated.
Sunday, May 3, 2026
From Net Zero to Defossilisation
From Net Zero to Defossilisation: Rethinking the Energy Transition
For decades, the global energy transition has been framed around a single objective: Net Zero.
It is a powerful goal. It has mobilised governments, industries, and capital at unprecedented scale. Yet, as we move deeper into implementation, a critical question is emerging:
👉 Are we solving the problem—or managing its symptoms?
---
## The Limitation of Net Zero
Net Zero, by definition, allows for continued emissions—provided they are balanced by offsets or removals.
In practice, this has led to:
- Continued dependence on fossil fuels
- Increasing reliance on carbon credits and offsets
- Complex accounting frameworks that often obscure physical realities
While these mechanisms may reduce reported emissions, they do not fundamentally change the structure of our energy systems.
We are still operating within a linear model:
> Extract → Burn → Emit → Offset
---
## A Shift in Perspective: From Accounting to Systems
The energy transition is not just a challenge of replacing fuels. It is a challenge of redesigning systems.
If we step back, the core issue becomes clear:
> Carbon is not inherently the problem.
> The problem is how we use—and lose—it.
In natural systems, carbon is continuously cycled. In industrial systems, it is extracted, used once, and discarded.
---
## Introducing Defossilisation
Defossilisation goes beyond Net Zero.
It is not about balancing emissions.
It is about eliminating dependence on fossil inputs altogether.
The objective shifts from:
- Reducing emissions
to
- Redesigning systems so emissions no longer exist as waste
---
## Carbon as a Carrier, Not a Liability
At the heart of defossilisation is a simple but powerful idea:
> Carbon can function as a reusable energy carrier.
Instead of releasing CO₂ into the atmosphere, it can be:
- captured
- combined with renewable hydrogen
- converted into fuel
- and reused within the system
This creates a closed-loop energy cycle, where carbon continuously circulates rather than accumulates.
---
## The Role of Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT)
Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT) is designed around this principle.
Rather than treating CO₂ as an endpoint, CRT:
- captures CO₂ from industrial processes
- converts it into renewable methane (RNG)
- reintroduces it as fuel for power and heat
The result is a self-reinforcing loop:
> CO₂ → Fuel → Energy → CO₂ → Fuel
In this model:
- Carbon is retained within the system
- Fossil fuel input is progressively eliminated
- Energy reliability is maintained
---
## Why This Matters for Heavy Industry
Sectors such as:
- steel
- cement
- refining
cannot rely solely on intermittent renewables or direct electrification.
They require:
- continuous energy
- high-temperature heat
- stable fuel supply
Defossilisation through carbon recycling offers a pathway that:
- integrates with existing infrastructure
- avoids full system replacement
- maintains industrial continuity
---
## Beyond Technology: A New Framework for Value
Moving toward defossilisation also requires a shift in how we measure progress.
Traditional metrics such as GDP or even emissions intensity do not capture:
- system resilience
- energy security
- long-term sustainability
The next phase of the transition must focus on:
- system performance
- circularity
- resource efficiency
---
## From Transition to Transformation
The energy transition is often described as a process of substitution—replacing one fuel with another.
Defossilisation represents something deeper:
> A transition from linear consumption to circular systems.
It is not about choosing between:
- hydrogen or batteries
- renewables or fuels
It is about integrating them into coherent, closed-loop systems.
---
## Conclusion
Net Zero has been an essential starting point.
But as we confront the realities of implementation, it is becoming clear that balancing emissions is not enough.
The long-term solution lies in redesigning how energy systems function—so that:
- carbon is no longer wasted
- fossil inputs are no longer required
- and industrial systems can operate sustainably without compromise
> Defossilisation is not just an environmental goal.
It is a systems transformation.
And technologies that enable carbon to circulate—rather than accumulate—may well define the next chapter of the global energy transition.
---
Ahilan Raman
Managing Director
Clean Energy and Water Technologies Pty Ltd (CEWT)
“Carbon is not the problem. Linear thinking is.”
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Global Licensing Framework
Clean Energy and Water Technologies Pty Ltd (CEWT)
Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT)
Global Licensing Framework
1. Positioning
Carbon Recycling Technology (CRT) is a system architecture designed to achieve defossilisation. It integrates renewable hydrogen, captured CO₂, and energy generation into a closed carbon loop, enabling firm, zero-emission energy systems.
CRT is not a standalone technology or a collection of unit operations. It is a designed system that delivers a specific outcome: elimination of fossil fuel dependence.
2. Licensing Scope
CEWT licenses CRT as a system architecture framework, including:
- Core system design: closed carbon loop configuration and integrated energy–fuel–carbon architecture
- Process integration logic: hydrogen production, CO₂ utilisation, methanation, and power generation integration
- System performance targets: carbon circularity, zero fossil input (post start-up), and firm energy output
3. Boundaries (IP Protection)
CEWT retains (non-negotiable):
- Carbon loop architecture and system logic
- Integration methodology and mass/energy balance framework
- Definition of CRT-compliant systems
Licensees may configure:
- Equipment vendors and engineering design
- Site-specific layouts and EPC execution
Restricted disclosure areas include proprietary CO₂ recovery pathways and advanced optimisation logic.
4. Commercial Model
- Upfront licensing fee based on project scale
- Ongoing royalty linked to energy or fuel output
- Optional CEWT equity or advisory participation
- Strategic partnerships with potential regional or sector-specific exclusivity
5. Implementation Model
CRT is vendor-agnostic and globally deployable:
- Compatible with multiple gas turbine, methanation, and electrolyser technologies
- Applicable to new builds, retrofits, and industrial integration (steel, fuels, chemicals)
6. Value Proposition
For Developers/Investors: Firm renewable energy, reduced fuel risk, long-term asset relevance
For Governments: Energy security, decarbonisation, industrial competitiveness
For Industry: Continuous energy supply and integrated fuel + power solutions
7. Strategic Rationale
CRT addresses the system gap in the energy transition by closing the carbon loop, integrating energy and fuels, and delivering firm, zero-emission output beyond intermittent renewable generation.
8. Engagement Pathway
1. Initial non-confidential briefing
2. Technical alignment discussion
3. NDA execution
4. Feasibility/integration study
5. Licensing agreement
Defossilisation is not a fuel switch. It is a system redesign.
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