University of Technology Sydney (UTS) to launch Global Game Changers - The Big Carbon Rethink event on 8 August

Industry experts to discuss ways we can achieve net-zero in the world of global manufacturing

UTSScience_Algae_Tubular_Bioreactor_Tanks (photo by Anna Zhu)

UTS Science explores ways to reduce carbon emissions using algae bioreactors. Photo by Anna Zhu.
UTS Science explores ways to reduce carbon emissions using algae bioreactors. Photo by Anna Zhu.

Sydney, Australia, July 25, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Event Details
Global Game Changers: The Big Carbon Rethink
Thursday 8 August
6:00pm (Sydney Time)
F2F in the UTS Great Hall or online livestream via Zoom
Register now

When we measure carbon footprints, certain large industries capture much public scrutiny, including energy, iron and steel production, transportation, and construction.

But there’s another less obvious sector that has significant environmental impact.  Households – representing the average consumer buying everyday things like phones, clothes, furniture, computers, and toys – according to the International Society of Industry Ecology account for more that 60% of global emissions.

While the complexities of this sector have proven difficult for governments to tackle, specialised individuals are stepping up to the challenge.  Professor Peter Ralph from the Faculty of Science at the University of Technology Sydney (UTS) is one example.  He says, “I’m a research scientist by background, but my goal is to use science to help all industries decarbonise.”

Professor Ralph’s research uses algae to remove carbon from the atmosphere and integrates it into industrial production processes.  “Effectively,” he explains, “I’m remaking the things people want and need using net zero technologies.”

Achieving net-zero in the world of manufacturing is the next topic of discussion in the UTS Global Game Changers series, entitled The Big Carbon Rethink.

On 8 August, Professor Ralph will sit down with Vice President of Manufacturing at global technology conglomerate, Siemens, Dr Gunter Beitinger; co-founder of innovative plastics-alternative company Uluu, Dr Julia Reisser; director of brand and marketing at iconic Australian swimwear group Piping Hot, Amy Low; and fellow UTS researcher and marine ecologist, Dr Alex Thomson.

With well-known ABC ‘War on Waste’ host, Craig Reucassel, leading the conversation, discussants will examine factors driving consumer behaviour and enabling companies to transition to net zero.

“We recognise,” says Piping Hot’s Amy Low, “that a successful transition is as much about creating a sense of value in the product as it is about eliminating emissions in the production process.  Industry structures and the way we consume products both need to change.”

In pursuit of the most innovative and sustainable outcomes, Piping Hot Australia has commissioned the UTS research collective directed by Professor Ralph – The Climate Change Cluster (C3) – to develop a new biomaterial derived from algae that can sequester carbon from the ocean and reduce the environmental impact of synthetic fibres.