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Doughnut-shaped object wound about with brightly coloured wire.

Download the technical and pricing details for CSIRO’s in-wheel motor design, which is widely accepted as the most efficient for solar car racing.

Overviews

 
  • This picture shows the front of the CSIRO Energy Centre and the array of organic photovoltaic cells that line the front of the building.

    We are playing an essential role in researching and developing technologies to achieve the objective of near zero emissions from the use of energy worldwide.

  • Wind turbine

    The Energy Transformed Flagship is developing clean affordable energy and transport technologies for a sustainable future - the first steps towards a hydrogen economy.

  • Ms Rosalie Louey sits at a laboratory desk wearing her safety goggles and lab coat and uses a variety of instruments to prepare components for the UltraBattery.

    This innovative advancement on conventional battery design from the Energy Transformed National Research Flagship delivers low cost, long life, high performance power and provides a solution for future energy storage needs.

  • Car exhaust valves.

    CSIRO is coating engine components with a tough, low friction coating to increase engine efficiency and reduce fuel consumption.

  • Photograph of a person holding a lightweight car engine with one hand.
    CSIRO’s metal alloy expertise has helped to develop lightweight car engines  with a magnesium alloy that is lighter than aluminium and as strong as steel.

     

  • Holden's ECOmmodore in front of Uluru

    CSIRO exploits the most advanced concepts in magnetic materials, electromagnetics applied magnetics and drives. We are reducing energy use and greenhouse gas emissions by designing and developing energy-efficient electric machines and drives.
     

  • Photograph of a person holding a lightweight car engine with one hand.

    Sam Tartaglia from CSIRO’s Light Metals Flagship says we can save on fuel costs, simply by driving lighter, safer vehicles. In this podcast, Sam explains how the use of light metals to take just 100 kilograms off the weight of our cars can save us 53 cents a litre every 100 kilometres. (4.59)

  • Report cover of 'Fuel for thought' - Future Fuels Forum report.

    A joint industry/CSIRO forum in Melbourne today will examine the fuels of the future, in light of predictions that oil will cost between $2.00 and $8.00 a litre within the next decade. According to Paul Graham, from CSIRO’s Energy Transformed Flagship, the alternatives include biofuels made from non-food materials and even algae. (5:35)

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Contact

CSIRO Enquiries
Phone: 1300 363 400*
Alt Phone: 61 3 9545 2176 
Fax: 61 3 9545 2175 
*local call within Australia