Ocean waste around the world is a major problem, and it’s one that hits especially close to home for Chilean plastics company Comberplast. The country’s Patagonian coastline is home to dynamic fishing...
When the COVID-19 pandemic forced the closure of schools around the world, medical student Deep Patel wanted certainty that he and his classmates could return to the classroom and clinical environments for their...
Rooted in science, innovation at ExxonMobil is sparked by thousands of engineers and scientists – including 2,500 PhDs – working to scale promising ideas into viable, industrial-grade products.
What’s happening? ExxonMobil and researchers from Georgia Tech and Imperial College London are working together on membrane technology research that could reduce carbon dioxide emissions and lower the energy...
ExxonMobil and Princeton University's Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment are extending their research partnership to support new programs to advance breakthrough energy technologies like power...
ExxonMobil is partnering with scientists and engineers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Laboratories to research affordable, scalable, energy solutions that reduce emissions.
These are some of the projects taking shape in the labs of the University of Texas at Austin, where a select group of students is working on potential energy solutions of tomorrow. The students, more formally known...
For most college students it’s easy to measure success – it’s a high GPA, a great score on a midterm or securing a job after graduation.
But at the University of Texas, a select group of graduate students,...
When it comes to carbon capture and storage (CCS) research, scientists focus on a key word: efficiency.
That’s because, while CCS is an essential technology that can help the world reach the Paris goals,...
No single company, organization or institution has all the answers when it comes to developing tomorrow’s low-emission energy. That’s why global energy company ExxonMobil is partnering with a range of...