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Clean Energy Symposium 2025: Driving Innovation, Collaboration, and Transformation

On 4 September 2025, the Centre for Sustainable Development (CSD), in collaboration with the Centre for Hydrogen Innovations at the National University of Singapore (NUS), had the privilege of hosting the Clean Energy Symposium. The event brought together more than 120 invited guests, with University of Newcastle Chancellor The Honourable Patricia Forsythe and His Excellency High Commissioner Allaster Cox, Patron of the CSD, delivering the welcome remarks.

The symposium convened key representatives from academia, industry and innovation to explore the future of energy—highlighting how applied research, collaboration, and new models of partnership can drive the global transition.

Dr Jessica Allen [moderator], Prof Behdad Moghtaderi, The Honourable Patricia Forsythe, Dr Haoxin Xu, A/Prof Salim Shaik, Prof Zhao Dan (left to right).

In Panel 1: Clean Fuels, we heard how green hydrogen, ammonia, and other emerging technologies are not only reshaping energy systems, but also demanding new models of engineering, research, and collaboration. We were reminded that building this industry requires not just technological breakthroughs, but also education, partnerships, and a shared vision across Singapore and Australia.

Mr Pierre Gouhier [moderator], Dr Jackson Leow, Prof Alan Broadfoot, Mr Shane Wong, Dr Shinnosuke Osafune (left to right).

In Panel 2: Powering Our Energy Future, the conversation broadened to include energy security, smarter investment mechanisms, and the importance of workforce development. From rethinking how we design cross-sector collaborations to ensuring we have the skilled people needed to deploy and maintain these innovations, it is clear that energy transformation is as much about people and policies as it is about technology.

While challenges like scaling technologies, managing risks, securing investment, and bridging skill gaps remain, there are also immense opportunities. Opportunities to integrate renewables at scale, to unlock innovation through cross-border collaboration, and to ensure that clean fuels and modern power systems become engines of growth and resilience.

Singapore’s commitment to net-zero by 2050, combined with Australia’s deep expertise in clean energy innovation, provides a strong platform for joint progress. The symposium demonstrated how shared learning and collaboration can turn ambition into reality.

This clean energy journey cannot be achieved in a single event, but the symposium marks an important step by connecting ideas, people, and possibilities. Together, we can accelerate the transition to a low-carbon, sustainable future.

We extend our thanks to our collaborators and sponsors for their generous support: Centre for Hydrogen Innovations (NUS), Newcastle Institute for Energy and Resources (NIER), Institute of Sustainability for Chemicals, Energy and Environment (ISCE², A*STAR), thyssenkrupp, Ramboll, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, and Tektronix.

More pictures of the symposium can be found here.