This webinar is a primer to the hugely disparate subject of renewable energy and serves as a solid factual introduction to the basic technologies and forces at work today. The full HOT course serves as a grounding ‘fundamentals’ unit, providing realistic context for anyone embarking on more specialised involvement in this fundamental evolution of energy for humanity.
Webinar Structure: 1 module of approximately 1 hour, including presentation of theory and Q&A session Start Time: 09:00 am CET (Central European Time)
Course Level: Foundation Duration: 1 days Instructor: Mark Deakin
Designed for you, if you are...
An utility and oil & gas energy manager tasked with evolving your company towards sustainable energy operations
A government or developing country policy maker, who must broadly understand alternatives
An energy investor, banker or working in a private equity or finance company, who needs key facts, major trends and a fuller understanding of today's diverse energy market
A scientist or technical staff member in the renewable/alternative energy industry
A professional in a forward looking energy company (primary producer, distributor or retailer)
An individual or company, installing solar or off-the-grid systems
Employed at a Renewable Energy University Department
Interested in renewable energy (architect, local and federal government staff, university staff)
How we build your confidence
Online presentation based on up-to-date industry information and practical experience, including concepts and forward looking scenarios
Q&A session
The benefits from attending
By attending this webinar you will feel confident in your understanding of:
The contribution, technology and pros and cons of all major RE types
Energy storage fundamentals & types including Green Hydrogen
Grid integration fundamentals & developments
Topics
Major RE Types: - Hydro - Solar - Wind - Wave - Tidal - Nuclear - Geothermal - Biomass
Total contribution, reliability, technology, engineering & geographical setup, engineering equations, emerging technologies, environmental impact and economics compared with standard metrics
Energy storage mechanisms – current and emerging technologies