
Jannik Haas
Articles
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Nov 24, 2024 |
interest.co.nz | Jannik Haas |Andy Nicol |David Frank Dempsey |Ian Wright
By Jannik Haas, Andy Nicol, David Dempsey, Ian Wright, Matthew J Watson & Rebecca Peer*Hydrogen has been called the “Swiss army knife” of decarbonisation because it can do many things. But not all of them make sense. Today, the world uses about 100 megatonnes of hydrogen per year (MT/y), but this is produced almost entirely from fossil fuels. To use hydrogen for decarbonisation, we must shift to emissions-free forms.
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Nov 24, 2024 |
theconversation.com | Jannik Haas |Aaron Marshall |Andy Nicol |David Frank Dempsey |Ian Wright |Matthew Watson | +1 more
Jannik Haas receives funding from MBIE to work on topics related to energy systems and holds clean energy stocks. Aaron Marshall receives funding from MBIE to work on water electrolysers and energy-related technology. He has received funding from NZIMMR for energy storage technology. He is a co-founder and shareholder of Ternary Kinetics which is developing liquid organic hydrogen carrier technology and has minor shareholdings in a range of energy companies.
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Oct 8, 2024 |
nzherald.co.nz | David Frank Dempsey |Jannik Haas |Rebecca Peer
THREE KEY FACTS:The Government will reverse its ban on oil and gas explorationNew Zealand’s natural gas production is expected to drop below demandGreenpeace labels plans to reverse exploration ban a ‘pipe dream’David Dempsey is an Associate professor; Jannik Haas is a Senior Lecturer of Sustainable Systems; Rebecca Peer is a Senior lecturer. All are based at the University of Canterbury.
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Aug 15, 2024 |
interest.co.nz | David Frank Dempsey |Jannik Haas |Gareth Vaughan |David Hargreaves
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Aug 13, 2024 |
techxplore.com | David Frank Dempsey |Jannik Haas |Rebecca Peer
The coalition government recently announced its plan to reverse a ban on new oil and gas exploration to deal with an energy security challenge brought on by rapidly declining natural gas reserves. But this assumes, rather optimistically, that repealing the ban will prompt companies to invest in new gas fields. In practice, those companies will be carefully considering whether there is anyone to sell their gas to, or whether a future government could change the rules again.
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