Summary
Research Interests
- Technologies for mitigating carbon dioxide emissions, particularly from heavy industries (e.g. Iron and Steel, Cement, Chemicals etc.)
- Carbon dioxide capture and storage (CCS) and air capture (capture of carbon dioxide from ambient air)
- UK and international climate change mitigation policy
- Energy efficiency: technologies, policies and barriers to uptake
- Incentivising behavioural change in order to reduce individual and corporate carbon footprints
Biography:
- Mitigation Research Associate, Grantham Institute for Climate Change, Imperial College London, 2011 - Present
- PhD, Chemical Engineering, University of Cambridge. Chemical-looping combustion of solid fuels. 2007 - 2010
- BSc in Chemical Engineering, University of Cape Town, South Africa. 2003 - 2006.
University of Cambridge
Laboratory Demonstrator
- Fluid Mechanics Laboratory - 2009, 2010
Supervisor
- Bioprocess Engineering I (2nd Year) - 2009, 2010
- Bioprocess Engineering II (3rd Year) - 2009, 2010
- Reactors II (3rd Year) - 2008, 2009
- Reactors I (2nd Year) - 2007
Outreach activities
Designed a 1-day workshop on Carbon Capture and Storage for the Reach Out Lab, Imperial College London.
Publications
Journals
Gambhir A, Napp T, Hawkes A, et al. , 2017, The contribution of non-CO2 greenhouse gas mitigation to achieving long-term temperature goals, Energies, Vol:10, ISSN:1996-1073
Few SPM, Gambhir A, Napp T, et al. , 2017, The impact of shale gas on the cost and feasibility of meeting climate targets - a global energy system model analysis and an exploration of uncertainties, Energies, Vol:10, ISSN:1996-1073
Napp T, Bernie D, Thomas R, et al. , 2017, Exploring the feasibility of low-carbon scenarios using historical energy transitions analysis, Energies, Vol:10, ISSN:1996-1073
Gambhir A, Drouet L, McCollum D, et al. , 2017, Assessing the feasibility of global long-term mitigation scenarios, Energies, Vol:10, ISSN:1996-1073
Alberts G, Gurguc Z, Koutroumpis P, et al. , 2016, Competition and norms: a self-defeating combination?, Energy Policy, Vol:96, ISSN:1873-6777, Pages:504-523