Two Young Russians Begin World Journey to Research Global Energy Trends
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Two Young Russians Begin World Journey to Research Global Energy Trends

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3 pages
English
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Two Young Russians Begin World Journey to Research Global Energy Trends PR Newswire BRUSSELS, August 6, 2012 BRUSSELS, August 6, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- The Pair Plan To Visit Almost 20 Countries to Assess How Energy Challenges Are Being Dealt With Two young Russians kicked-off their round-the-world quest on Monday to explore how the most challenging energy problems are being dealt with in different parts of the world. Maria Khromova, a young Muscovite trained in the power industry, and Egor Goloshov, an aspiring economist from Zlatoust, began their journey in Berlin, Germany as the first stop on their tour, which will take them to different regions of the world over roughly three months. Ms. Khromova, 24, and Mr. Goloshov, 21, were selected in May out of a competitive pool of 49,000 applicants from across Russia as part of the Energy of Adventure project launched by the non-profit partnership Global Energy based in Moscow. The aim of the project is to highlight the world's various energy challenges, from coping with limited energy resource supplies to mitigating climate change, in various countries and to showcase how these challenges are being confronted. Ms. Khromova and Mr. Goloshov will meet with an array of energy experts over their journey, including scientists and academics, and visit a variety of companies and organizations, like the German Energy Agency.

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Two Young Russians Begin World Journey to Research Global Energy Trends
PR Newswire BRUSSELS, August 6, 2012
BRUSSELS,August 6, 2012/PRNewswire/ --
The Pair Plan To Visit Almost 20 Countries to Assess How Energy Challenges Are Being Dealt With
Two young Russians kicked-off their round-the-world quest on Monday to explore how the most challenging energy problems are being dealt with in different parts of the world. Maria Khromova, a young Muscovite trained in the power industry, and Egor Goloshov, an aspiring economist from Zlatoust, began their journey inBerlin, Germanyas the first stop on their tour, which will take them to different regions of the world over roughly three months. Ms. Khromova, 24, and Mr. Goloshov, 21, were selected in May out of a competitive pool of 49,000 applicants from acrossRussiaas part of the Energy of Adventure project launched by the non-profit partnership Global Energy based inMoscow. The aim of the project is to highlight the world's various energy challenges, from coping with limited energy resource supplies to mitigating climate change, in various countries and to showcase how these challenges are being confronted. Ms. Khromova and Mr. Goloshov will meet with an array of energy experts over their journey, including scientists and academics, and visit a variety of companies and organizations, like the German Energy Agency. They are also scheduled to visitChina,France,Iceland,Israel,Italy,Kazakhstan, andSouth Koreain the first weeks of their trip. "It is important that the world's energy challenges are discussed by the younger generations. We need to encourage more participation of the young in the discussion about how the world will meet its growing energy demands while improving its efficient use thereby also mitigating the effects of climate change," said Professor Klaus Riedle, Board Member of the Association of German Engineers and a Global Energy Prize Laureate. "The energy world should back more of these types of projects that the Global Energy Prize has sponsored," said Mr. Riedle. The International Energy Agency inParisforecasts global oil demand to increase substantiallyfrom around 89 million barrels per day (mb/d) in 2011 to 99 mb/d in 2035, with much of the growth coming from the transport sector in emerging economies.The agency expects the number of passenger vehicles to double to almost 1.7 billion by 2035 from current levels. Discussing how such demand will be met will be part of the various talking points that Ms. Khromova and Mr. Goloshov take up in their personal postings in social media outlets like Twitter and Facebook. Ms. Khromova and Mr. Goloshov will reort about their findins, discussions, and observations over the course of
their tour in hopes of inspiring and triggering new thinking and ideas for addressing today's interconnected energy challenges. Ms. Khromova and Mr. Goloshov also plan to visitAustralia,Brazil,Denmark, India,Japan,Spain,Tanzania, the UAE, and the US over the course of their tour before finishing the trip back inMoscow. "This is a great opportunity for the younger entrants into the energy business world to see firsthand how actors across the energy supply chain and in different parts of the world are coping with their unique set of energy challenges and problems. I am very excited to be a part of this unique endeavor," said Thorsteinn Ingi Sigfusson, Director of the Innovation Center in Icelandand a Global Energy Prize Laureate. Ms. Khromova, who comes from a family of scientists, said she plans to take all her findings from this tour to help inform a scientific paper she will write. "We are thrilled to be starting this trip after months of preparation and we look forward to sharing our discoveries and insights, particularly related to the power sector," said Ms. Khromova. Ms. Khromova has a geophysics degree from The Moscow State University and is currently pursuing a second university degree at the Moscow State Institute for Foreign Relations. Mr. Goloshov has a special interest in renewable sources of energy such as tidal, wind and solar energy and is currently enrolled in the Moscow Higher School of Economics. "With question marks surrounding the longevity of the world's traditional energy sources, it is important that we are adamantly exploring renewable sources of energy to see how we can scale up these technologies and increase their usage," Mr. Goloshov said. For further details about the tour being undertaken by Ms. Khromova and Mr. Goloshov or about the Energy of Adventure project, please contact Alena Georgobiani, Account Director at Fleishman-Hillard Vanguard, at georgobiani@fhv.ru. You can follow Mr. Goloshov and Ms. Khromova's journey on Twitter [http://www.twitter.com/energyadventure] and Facebook [http://www.fb.com/energyofadventure].
About the Global Energy Prize
The Global Energy Prize awards overUS$1meach year, and thus far has been granted to 27 scientists from around the globe, including past Laureates from the US,Great Britain,Canada,France,Germany,Iceland,Russia,Ukraineand Japan. The President of theRussian Federationparticipates in each year's award ceremony held at the conclusion of a week-long celebration of the awardees' work, Laureates' Week. Other world leaders who have supported the prize include the former US President George W. Bush, former British Prime Ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, former French President Jacques Chirac and current Canadian Prime Minister, Steven Harper. The Prize rewards innovation and solutions in global energy research and its concurrent environmental challenges. The degree to which a development contributes to the benefit of humanity is a key driver in deciding the recipient of the Prize. http://www.globalenergyprize.org/en/ http://twitter.com/#!/ge_prize
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