60 research outputs found

    Enabling onshore CO2 storage in Europe: fostering international cooperation around pilot and test sites

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    To meet the ambitious EC target of an 80% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, CO2 Capture and Storage (CCS) needs to move rapidly towards full scale implementation with geological storage solutions both on and offshore. Onshore storage offers increased flexibility and reduced infrastructure and monitoring costs. Enabling onshore storage will support management of decarbonisation strategies at territory level while enhancing security of energy supply and local economic activities, and securing jobs across Europe. However, successful onshore storage also requires overcoming some unique technical and societal challenges. ENOS will provide crucial advances to help foster onshore CO2 storage across Europe through: 1. Developing, testing and demonstrating in the field, under "real-life conditions", key technologies specifically adapted to onshore storage. 2. Contributing to the creation of a favourable environment for onshore storage across Europe. The ENOS site portfolio will provide a great opportunity for demonstration of technologies for safe and environmentally sound storage at relevant scale. Best practices will be developed using experience gained from the field experiments with the participation of local stakeholders and the lay public. This will produce improved integrated research outcomes and increase stakeholder understanding and confidence in CO2 storage. In this improved framework, ENOS will catalyse new onshore pilot and demonstration projects in new locations and geological settings across Europe, taking into account the site-specific and local socio-economic context. By developing technologies from TRL4/5 to TRL6 across the storage lifecycle, feeding the resultant knowledge and experience into training and education and cooperating at the pan-European and global level, ENOS will have a decisive impact on innovation and build the confidence needed for enabling onshore CO2 storage in Europe. ENOS is initiating strong international collaboration between European researchers and their counterparts from the USA, Canada, South Korea, Australia and South Africa for sharing experience worldwide based on real-life onshore pilots and field experiments. Fostering experience-sharing and research alignment between existing sites is key to maximise the investment made at individual sites and to support the efficient large scale deployment of CCS. ENOS is striving to promote collaboration between sites in the world through a programme of site twinning, focus groups centered around operative issues and the creation of a leakage simulation alliance

    A ‘quiet revolution’? The impact of Training Schools on initial teacher training partnerships

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    This paper discusses the impact on initial teacher training of a new policy initiative in England: the introduction of Training Schools. First, the Training School project is set in context by exploring the evolution of a partnership approach to initial teacher training in England. Ways in which Training Schools represent a break with established practice are considered together with their implications for the dominant mode of partnership led by higher education institutions (HEIs). The capacity of Training Schools to achieve their own policy objectives is examined, especially their efficacy as a strategy for managing innovation and the dissemination of innovation. The paper ends by focusing on a particular Training School project which has adopted an unusual approach to its work and enquires whether this alternative approach could offer a more profitable way forward. During the course of the paper, five different models of partnership are considered: collaborative, complementary, HEI-led, school-led and partnership within a partnership

    Melanoma Spheroids Grown Under Neural Crest Cell Conditions Are Highly Plastic Migratory/Invasive Tumor Cells Endowed with Immunomodulator Function

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    International audienceBACKGROUND: The aggressiveness of melanoma tumors is likely to rely on their well-recognized heterogeneity and plasticity. Melanoma comprises multi-subpopulations of cancer cells some of which may possess stem cell-like properties. Although useful, the sphere-formation assay to identify stem cell-like or tumor initiating cell subpopulations in melanoma has been challenged, and it is unclear if this model can predict a functional phenotype associated with aggressive tumor cells. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We analyzed the molecular and functional phenotypes of melanoma spheroids formed in neural crest cell medium. Whether from metastatic or advanced primary tumors, spheroid cells expressed melanoma-associated markers. They displayed higher capacity to differentiate along mesenchymal lineages and enhanced expression of SOX2, NANOG, KLF4, and/or OCT4 transcription factors, but not enhanced self-renewal or tumorigenicity when compared to their adherent counterparts. Gene expression profiling attributed a neural crest cell signature to these spheroids and indicated that a migratory/invasive and immune-function modulating program could be associated with these cells. In vitro assays confirmed that spheroids display enhanced migratory/invasive capacities. In immune activation assays, spheroid cells elicited a poorer allogenic response from immune cells and inhibited mitogen-dependent T cells activation and proliferation more efficiently than their adherent counterparts. Our findings reveal a novel immune-modulator function of melanoma spheroids and suggest specific roles for spheroids in invasion and in evasion of antitumor immunity. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: The association of a more plastic, invasive and evasive, thus a more aggressive tumor phenotype with melanoma spheroids reveals a previously unrecognized aspect of tumor cells expanded as spheroid cultures. While of limited efficiency for melanoma initiating cell identification, our melanoma spheroid model predicted aggressive phenotype and suggested that aggressiveness and heterogeneity of melanoma tumors can be supported by subpopulations other than cancer stem cells. Therefore, it could be constructive to investigate melanoma aggressiveness, relevant to patients and clinical transferability

    New efficient and long life catalyst for glycerol dehydration to acrolein

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    International @ RAFFINAGE+SLO:JMIInternational audienceNon

    Natural CO2 Accumulations in Europe: Understanding Long-Term Geological Processes in CO2 Sequestration

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    Approximately one-third of anthropogenic CO2 emissions arises from transport, one-third from industrial and domestic sources, and one-third from power generation. While achieving substantial reductions in emissions from either of the first two will be a long-term process, the technology to capture CO2 from power plants is available and could lead quickly to significant reductions in emissions—provided mechanisms are available to dispose of the CO2 thus captured. The capture and underground storage of industrial quantities of carbon dioxide is currently being demonstrated at the Sleipner West gas field in the Norwegian sector of the North Sea. Natural CO2 accumulations offer the potential to understand the long-term geological processes involved in CO2 sequestration. By identifying the effects of CO2 on rock properties, such as changes in permeability and porosity or rock strength, models can be corroborated against empirical data. This can build confidence in their ability to predict likely responses of reservoirs and cap-rocks to geological sequestration. In addition, where CO2 is actively leaking to the surface, the effects of CO2 on groundwaters and ecosystems can be identified, and migration mechanisms can be described. The interactions between CO2-charged porewaters and both reservoirs and their caprocks through petrographic characterization, porewater and gas geochemistry, geomechanical testing, and gas migration studies in low permeability caprocks have been described. Leakage pathways are identified through soil gas surveys for CO2 and associated tracer gases. Geochemical analyses of carbonated waters are assessing the effects of CO2 on groundwaters. An understanding of these processes will be subsequently gained through geochemical and geomechanical modeling

    The geochemical reactions resulting from CO2 injection into the Midale Formation, Weyburn Oilfield : a laboratory experimental and modelling study

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    The international IEA Weyburn CO2 Monitoring and Storage Project aims to monitor and predict the behaviour of injected CO2 into the Midale reservoir at the Weyburn oil field in southern Saskatchewan, Canada. One aspect of this project has been to identify likely geochemical changes that result from the injection of CO2 into the reservoir (MidaleFormation). This paper provides a summary of fluid chemical and mineralogical changes occurring in a series of well-constrained laboratory experiments that have utilised samples of Midale core from the Weyburn field and synthetic formation water based upon measured well fluid compositions. This information and other physical data (Durocher et al., this issue) are then used to test, constrain, and verify predictions from geochemical modelling activities, as a prelude to extending theoretical predictions to reservoir-scales and long timescales
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