Head of the Center
Geophysicist, PhD, Associate Professor of the Department "Technologies of geological and geophysical exploration" of the Branch of the Russian State University of Oil and Gas named after I.M.Gubkin in Tashkent, regional representative of the long-established oil and gas consulting company "DeGolyer and MacNaughton" in the Republic of Uzbekistan, member of the international professional organization of oil and gas industry specialists (SPE).
Mr. Ibragimov H. has a Master of Applied Geoscience (Heriot Watt University, Edinburgh 2015), Master of Oil and Gas Engineering (Gubkin Russian State University of Oil and Gas, 2014), and Specialist in Mining Engineering (diploma with honors, 2013) from Gubkin Russian State University of Oil and Gas in Tashkent. Author of more than 30 academic publications.
Wind energy is a branch of energy concerned with the production of electricity from wind. Wind turbines are used to convert the kinetic energy of the wind into mechanical and then electrical energy.
The main components of a wind power plant are wind turbines, rotor blades, tower and foundation. Wind generators can be horizontal-axis or vertical-axis. Horizontal-axis wind generators usually have a larger rotor diameter and power than vertical-axis wind turbines.
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Lithium and its compounds are critically needed for the automotive industry, aircraft manufacturing, metallurgy, microelectronics, chemistry and others. It is especially important in the production of high-capacity batteries. In addition, lithium is necessary in severe
industry: there it is used for smelting and alloying aluminum, increasing ductility, strength and restoring metals. It is also needed in nuclear energy. Lithium is the only available source of tritium, and it is also used in the manufacture of rods that regulate the reactor protection system.
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Recently, when forecasting global energy consumption, many experts associate it with the energy transition. At the same time, some of them identify such a transition either with the implementation of the so-called “climate agenda”, or with the decarbonization of the world economy and the development of “green” energy, or with the change from one energy source to another. The team at the Center for Energy Diplomacy and Geopolitics has prepared a brief overview of current trends in the energy transition.
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