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The Eni Award is an international prize given to the best applied research projects in the fields of energy, sustainability and the environment. The world of energy is changing; as a word, it no longer refers solely to oil and coal, but instead is more complex, moving towards a sustainable energy mix in which renewables play an ever more central role.
Find out moreBy investing in new solutions we can increase the efficiency and sustainability of our operations, reducing both costs and environmental impact. This is a real commitment that we express in every area of our business: from the exploration of new deposits to the subsequent stages of production, transport and refining, with a particular focus on the strategic areas of renewables and the environment.
In our laboratories we develop new technologies, such as waste-to-fuel; new ideas, such as the bio-refinery at Porto Marghera; and collaborative ventures, such as our partnerships with MIT and the CNR or our recent agreement with the University of Bologna.
In this video, Paolo Pollesel describes Eni's Energy Transition R&D programme, which is developing new technologies to support the use of natural gas as an energy source with a reduced environmental impact as part of a circular economy. The programme spans three different areas: gas conversion processes; H2S capture and conversion technologies; and innovative methods to capture and use CO2. We look at some of these in depth.
Through our Knowledge Management System (KMS) we capture, spread and enhance the skills developed on the field by our technicians and operators.
Giuseppe Tannoia: “Eni research aims to ensure it has command of the skills required for technological innovation. We are working in research today for the Eni of the future.”
A journey across the South-Central Pyrenees with Emiliano Mutti – a poet-geologist. This is a man who whispers with rocks, an expert who studies the past to understand the present. The geological past of the South-Central Pyrenees holds enormous significance for those who dedicate themselves to the exploration for hydrocarbons and their production. We find out why.
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