16 December 2021
28 projects launched, 69 publications, 17 PhD …
1 December 2021
Woodside Energy today became a Core Participant of the Future Energy Exports Cooperative Research Centre (FEnEx CRC), joining a collaboration of more than 27 industry, government and research organisations working on the knowledge and technologies needed to lower the carbon emissions associated with the energy Australia supplies to millions of people overseas.
23 November 2021
A new $1.5million research project through the Digital Health CRC (DHCRC) is set to apply health informatics solutions to decision making in hospitals to deliver safer and more effective patient care.
23 November 2021
The Heavy Industry Low-emissions Transition CRC (HILT CRC) is delighted with the announcement from the Federal Government at the 26th Conference of the Parties (COP) in Glasgow that Australia will co- lead the global Mission Innovation Net Zero Industry Mission, on de-carbonising industry
22 November 2021
Transportation accounts for about 24% of direct carbon dioxide emissions from fuel combustion globally. Demand for transport is expected to grow significantly in the coming decades. Without major initiatives to decarbonise the sector, carbon dioxide emissions from the transport sector could increase by about 75 percent by 2050, as estimated by the International Council of Clean Transportation (ICCT) in 2020.
19 November 2021
Cooperative perception, or collective perception (CP) is an emerging and promising technology for intelligent transportation systems (ITS), and its development and demonstration has been the focus of a recently completed iMOVE project
19 November 2021
A $6.5million collaboration led by AACo and Food Agility Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) aims to revolutionise how rangeland farmers measure, manage and trade carbon.
The three-year project was announced today as a cornerstone initiative in AACo’s Sustainability Framework.
12 November 2021
A new Australian collaborative Autism CRC study, led by Mater Research and The University of Queensland, has challenged the growing popular belief that the gut microbiome drives autism.
The study’s findings may put the brakes on the experimental use of microbiome-based interventions such as faecal microbiota transplants and probiotics, that some believe may treat or minimise autistic behaviours.
4 November 2021
A new normal International collaboration under the …
3 November 2021
Our Prime Minister Scott Morrison has told dozens …
27 October 2021
hydrogen industry could need to buffer fluctuations in supply and demand.
26 October 2021
Over the past few years the kerb – previously a relatively minor concern for city planners and transport engineers – has taken centre stage. This new-found focus on the kerb has been prompted by concerns over increased competition for kerb space brought on by evolving trends in transport planning, use, and technology.