In a wide-ranging Q&A, Joe Blommaert, the head of ExxonMobil’s Low Carbon Solutions business, explains how his team is working to commercialize and deploy technologies to help lower global emissions and fight...
ExxonMobil has signed a Memorandum of Understanding to participate in the recently announced Acorn carbon capture and storage project (CCS) in Scotland. The project plans to capture and store approximately 5-6...
Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the known universe. On earth, the vast majority of hydrogen atoms are part of molecules such as natural gas (primarily methane, CH4) or water (H2O). Almost no pure hydrogen...
ExxonMobil has launched a new business to commercialize its extensive low-carbon technology portfolio. The new business, ExxonMobil Low Carbon Solutions, will initially focus on carbon capture and storage (CCS).
Why refineries have a key role to play in addressing the dual challenge of providing reliable and affordable energy while reducing environmental impacts.
When the solution of a scientific riddle could potentially play a big role in addressing the dual challenge, ExxonMobil’s researchers are ready to search as far as they need to, to find the right research...
We sat down with ExxonMobil’s vice president of research and development (R&D), Dr Vijay Swarup, to ask him where the company is focusing global R&D efforts on our mission to solve the dual challenge.
Join ExxonMobil’s RoseMarie Egglesfield on her journey to this year’s Women’s Forum Global Meeting in Paris, where delegates share knowledge and discuss solutions.
Carbon capture and storage (CCS) will be a key technology in managing the risks of climate change. That’s why ExxonMobil is working to develop new carbon dioxide (CO2) capture technologies.
Developing the European energy system to reduce carbon emissions is an important topic across the continent – and nowhere more so than in the European Union’s (EU) policy-making hub of Brussels, Belgium.
Extracting carbon dioxide molecules from a stream of exhaust before the CO2 enters the atmosphere is easier said than done… and it’s not even that easily said.