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Eni announces young talent from Africa award

Emerance Jessica Claire DAssise Goma-Tchimbakala of the Marien NGouabi University of Brazzaville (Congo) and Elvis Tinashe Ganda, a Zimbabwean student at Durban University of Technology (South Africa) have received Eni’s Young Talent from Africa Award

Goma Tchimbakala's project focused on the effect of microorganisms and metabolised synthesised substances on environmental rehabilitation. The biosurfactants produced by the bacterias can be produced on a large scale, which would open the doors to a new industrial chapter in Congo due to their role as pharmaceutical and cosmetics producers.

Ganda’s research is also particularly important in the transition towards the increasing use of renewable energy in the transport sector. Ganda’s research focuses on biomass, a renewable alternative fuel with an opportunity to reduce the environmental impact caused by transporting people and commodities.

Eni has announced the winners of the 11th edition of the Eni Award. Over the years, the award, established in 2007, has become an international point of reference for research in the energy and environment sectors.

The Energy Transition Award, one of the three main awards, is awarded for exceptional innovation in the hydrocarbon sector towards the decarbonisation of the energy system. This year’s recipient is Omar M Yaghi from Berkeley University, California. He studied the use in the selective separation of CO2 from combustion gases and the capture of atmospheric humidity, a particularly innovative application for desert areas.

The Energy Frontiers Award, for research on renewable energy sources and energy storage, was awarded to Zhong Lin Wang from the Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta. Professor Wang has developed “triboelectric nanogenerators,” a new group of devices capable of converting naturally occurring energy into high-yielding electricity, both on a macroscopic scale (such as waves in the ocean) and on a microscopic scale (body movements, muscular contractions, blood flow), creating a huge scope of potential for energy retrieval and generation.

The award for Advanced Environmental Solutions, dedicated to research on air, water and land conservation and industrial site reclamation, was awarded to Sang Yup Lee from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology of Daejeon in South Korea.

The Young Researcher of the Year award, which annually awards two researchers under 30 who have obtained a research doctorate at Italian universities, was given to Michele De Bastiani and Gianluca Longoni. The first researcher is a student at the University of Padova - Italian Institute of Technology, who presented a thesis on the stability of two emerging photovoltaic technologies: organic photovoltaics and perovskite-based cells, and their potential capabilities. The second winner, Dr Longoni from the University of Milano Bicocca, was given the award for his thesis on the development of innovative electrodes for sodium ion based batteries, a safer electrical “storage” technology than lithium ion batteries.