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INALUM collaborates with MIT Energy Initiative to advance low-carbon energy technologies

Indonesian company will support research through MITEI’s Low-Carbon Energy Center for Materials in Energy and Extreme Environments.
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A research collaboration agreement between the MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI) and INALUM was announced at a supporting event of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group Annual Meeting in Bali, Indonesia. Pictured, left to right: Business executive Rudy Setyopurnomo MS ’92, founder of the MIT Club of Indonesia; Wendy Duan, manager of Asia Pacific energy partnerships at MITEI; Budi Guna...
Caption:
A research collaboration agreement between the MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI) and INALUM was announced at a supporting event of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group Annual Meeting in Bali, Indonesia. Pictured, left to right: Business executive Rudy Setyopurnomo MS ’92, founder of the MIT Club of Indonesia; Wendy Duan, manager of Asia Pacific energy partnerships at MITEI; Budi Gunadi Sadikin, CEO of INALUM; and Fajar Harry Sampurno, Indonesia’s deputy minister of state-owned enterprises.
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Photo: INALUM

Indonesia’s state-owned holding company PT Indonesia Asahan Aluminium (Persero), also known as INALUM, is joining the MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI) as a member company to support research that advances development of low-carbon energy technologies and explore ways to reduce the company’s carbon footprint through MITEI’s Low-Carbon Energy Center for Materials in Energy and Extreme Environments.

The center is one of seven Low-Carbon Energy Centers that MITEI has established as part of the Institute’s Plan for Action on Climate Change, which calls for strategic engagement with industry, government, and other stakeholders to solve the pressing challenges of decarbonizing the energy sector and meeting global energy demand with advanced technologies.

“By joining MITEI as a member, INALUM will be making valuable contributions to the MIT low-carbon energy research community through its support for faculty and student projects,” says Robert C. Armstrong, director of MITEI and the Chevron Professor of Chemical Engineering at MIT. “Our scientists and engineers look forward to collaborating on solutions to energy and climate challenges our world faces today and tomorrow.”

“MITEI’s unrivaled expertise will help INALUM to ensure that low-carbon initiatives will be adopted in implementing the company’s three given mandates: secure domestic reserve; develop downstream business; and become a world-class company,” says INALUM CEO Budi Gunadi Sadikin, adding: “This collaboration will specifically help INALUM in developing large-scale, cost-effective, and sustainable energy in the mining and metal industry as well as pioneering the use of energy materials for low-carbon applications from metals and minerals.”

The research collaboration was announced at a supporting event of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank Group Annual Meeting in Bali, Indonesia, on Oct. 10. The collaboration evolved through the efforts of Wendy Duan, manager of MITEI’s Asia Pacific energy partnerships, and Rudy Setyopurnomo MS ’92, a business executive who founded the MIT Club of Indonesia, working with INALUM officials.

Among INALUM’s research interests with MITEI are developing more environmentally sustainable processes for mining, refining, and smelting metals; investigating high-performance materials for energy storage; and exploring rare earth metal applications such as magnets for use in electric vehicles and wind power.

The MITEI Low-Carbon Energy Centers bring together researchers from multiple disciplines at MIT to engage with companies, government agencies, and other stakeholders, including the philanthropic community, to develop deployable solutions in key technology areas to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and help address climate change. The centers build on MITEI’s existing work with industry members, government, and foundations. MITEI’s membership programs provide key focus, research opportunities, and critical funding for the next generation of energy technologists, including MIT students and postdocs.

The Low-Carbon Energy Center for Materials in Energy and Extreme Environments works to develop new materials, processes, diagnostics, and software with the goal of improving the economy and efficiency of materials while reducing their carbon emissions and other environmental impacts. One key objective is to devise innovative materials solutions to improve performance and reduce the carbon footprint of existing energy technologies. Another is to provide the innovative functional and structural materials needed to enable and enhance new energy technologies. The center’s co-directors are Ju Li, the Battelle Energy Alliance Professor of Nuclear Science and Engineering, and Bilge Yildiz, a professor of nuclear science and engineering and of materials science and engineering.

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