ExxonMobil expands low-emissions technology research with Universities in India

Fri, Oct 18, 2019
By publisher
3 MIN READ

Featured, Oil & Gas

By Anayo Ezugwu

TO further expand its extensive portfolio of research collaboration with India’s universities, ExxonMobil has signed agreements with the Indian Institute of Technology locations in Madras and Bombay. The five-year agreements will focus on progressing research in biofuels and bio-products.

The agreement will also target gas transport and conversion, climate and environment, and low-emissions technologies for the power and industrial sectors. The agreements will partner the institutes’ areas of expertise with ExxonMobil’s research.

These collaborations are recent additions to a series of partnerships ExxonMobil has established to progress innovative, lower-emissions research programmes with more than 80 universities, five energy centres and multiple private sector partners. The company has spent $10 billion since 2000 developing and deploying lower-emissions energy solutions.

Vijay Swarup, vice president, research and development at ExxonMobil Research and Engineering Company, said these agreements would give the company a better understanding of how to progress and apply technologies in India. He said it will also enable them to develop breakthrough lower-emissions solutions that can make a difference globally.

Indian Institute of Technology, IIT Madras is a public engineering institute located in Chennai, Tamil Nadu and has been ranked as India’s top engineering institute for the fourth consecutive year by India’s Ministry of Human Resource Development. IIT Bombay is a public engineering institute located in Powai, Mumbai and is widely recognized as a leader in engineering, education and research. The IIT system has 23 institutes, each of which is autonomous and linked through a common council, which oversees their administration.

Professor Ravindra Gettu, dean of industrial consultancy and sponsored research of IIT Madras, said IIT Madras is committed to providing sustainable solutions in the energy, chemicals and waste management sectors. “I am confident about our collaboration with ExxonMobil to achieve these goals,” he said.

On his part, Professor Milind Atrey, dean of research and development at IIT Bombay said IIT Bombay values its relationship with ExxonMobil and the cause associated with it. “We are sure that this relationship will be long lasting and yield fruitful results,” he said.

Recently, ExxonMobil conducted a joint study with IIT Bombay and the Council for Energy, Environment and Water, a leading India-based think-tank, focusing on the life cycle greenhouse gas, GHG, emissions associated with India’s power sector. The study looked at India’s projected electricity demand growth over the next 20 to 30 years and compared emissions associated with power generated by domestic coal and liquefied natural gas (LNG) imported from the United States. It found that, on average, life cycle GHG emissions from LNG imported into India are approximately 54 percent lower than those associated with India coal.

ExxonMobil, the largest publicly traded international oil and gas company, uses technology and innovation to help meet the world’s growing energy needs. ExxonMobil holds an industry-leading inventory of resources, is one of the largest refiners and marketers of petroleum products, and its chemical company is one of the largest in the world.

 – Oct 18, 2019 @ 17:49 GMT |

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