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University of Graz Climate Change news Using liquefied natural gas to generate heating without using fossil fuels or resorting to fracking
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Friday, 18 November 2022

Using liquefied natural gas to generate heating without using fossil fuels or resorting to fracking

University of Graz participates in EU project to manufacture synthetic methane as an alternative to natural gas

Finding a climate-neutral source of gas is one of the most pressing concerns of our times. One option, which is rapidly gaining in significance, is the carbon neutral, synthetic production of a liquefied natural gas substitute from biomass. Since the beginning of November, University of Graz has been participating in the has been coordinating the project “CarbonNeutralLNG” focusing on the production of synthetic methane using hydrogen, as an alternative to fossil energy sources, and carbon dioxide (CO2). The project, coordinated by Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (Germany), is part of Horizon Europe, the central funding program offered by the European Union to encourage research and innovation, and is to receive 3.5 million euros in funding over a period of three years.

Green methane from green hydrogen and green carbon dioxide

With only one six hundredth of the volume of its gaseous variant, liquefied natural gas is much better suited for transport and storage. Its main component is methane. Currently, methane is already being liquefied by being cooled down to extremely low temperatures of approximately negative 160°C and imported in large quantities to Germany as liquefied natural gas (or LNG for short) to end Europe’s dependence on Russian natural gas.

Together with twelve research partners from six European states and Canada, the aim is to supply Europe’s LNG terminals with LNG from renewable energy sources. If green hydrogen is produced in countries with a surplus of electricity from renewable sources, as is the case in Iceland, Chile, Australia or Canada, it can be used to produce LNG, which can then be imported very easily and cheaply to Europe in the form of liquefied methane using existing LNG tankers.

“The important part is that the CO2 used to produce the methane does not originate from fossil sources, but rather is taken directly from the atmosphere,” explains Prof. Jürgen Karl from the Chair of Energy Process Engineering, FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg. The process involves the thermochemical gasification of biomass, during which sustainable biomass takes “green” carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Using steam to trigger the gasification of the biomass also produces large quantities of hydrogen that reacts with the additional hydrogen from the electrolysis and the biogenic CO2 to produce methane. The gasification process uses electricity from renewable energies, ensuring that the biomass resources are used as efficiently as possible.

Import and innovation

A further focus of the project is to investigate legal and social barriers to the market implementation of green LNG.  The project aims to provide LNG for the transport sector, for example for shipping or heavy goods road transport. As well as this role as an e-fuel, green LNG can also be used to replace natural gas from fossil sources for power generation, heat generation and in the chemical industry, for example for manufacturing plastics or medical drugs. Within the project, University of Graz will analyse existing hurdles of legal and socio-psychological nature to provide solutions for the successful conversion to climate-neutral LNG sources.

Detailed information on the EU project is available online at www.CarbonNeutralLNG.eu

More information:
Dr. Miriam Hofer
ClimLaw: Graz Research Center for Climate Law
miriam.hofer(at)uni-graz.at

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Circular Bioengineering: FWF Cluster of Excellence aims to revolutionise the product cycle

Take a renewable raw material from nature – wood, for example – break it down into its building blocks and use them to create a functional material, such as a water-repellent surface coating, with the help of green chemistry. Once this has served its purpose, break it down again into its chemical components and use them to build something new. This idea is set to revolutionise the production and life cycle of materials and goods. The Cluster of Excellence "Circular Bioengineering", funded by the Austrian Science Fund FWF, is researching how to produce products from biomass, develop sustainable methods for the production process, and open options for returning products that have reached the end of their lifetime back into a cycle. The University of Graz is a partner in this Cluster of Excellence, for which the FWF is providing 18 million euros. Including its own funds, the total volume of the project is 27 million euros. The lead is with the BOKU University in Vienna.

Climate change update: ClimateTracer of the University of Graz provides reliable data

Yesterday, the Copernicus Climate Change Service of the European Union published its data on global warming up to end of November 2024. These confirm that this year will see the 1.5 °C threshold clearly exceeded for the first time. The Wegener Center at the University of Graz already computed an accurate full-year prediction: the global near-surface air temperature in 2024 will rise by 1.62 °C – plus/minus 0.05 °C standard deviation – compared to the pre-industrial level. Such latest predictions for 2024 and other essential data on climate change are provided by the scientists via the Graz Climate Change Indicators (GCCI) portal.

Novel Methods of Semiconductor Manufacturing: University of Graz is partner in EU project

How can technological innovations be aligned with principles of sustainability and circularity? This is a challenge being tackled by researchers at the Department of Environmental Systems Sciences at the University of Graz. As a partner in a new EU project, the team, led by Rupert Baumgartner, is contributing its expertise in sustainability assessment for the semiconductor manufacturing process. The focus of the research project “HaloFreeEtch” is on developing innovative, environmentally friendly etching methods for semiconductors.

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