Vladimir Zinoviev | Renewable Energy Technologies | Research Excellence Award

Assoc Prof Dr. Vladimir Zinoviev | Sunotec | Research Excellence Award 

Sunotec | Bulgaria

Professor Vladimir Zinoviev is an accomplished academic and industry expert whose research and professional work focus on energy transformation, sustainable development, and the economics and management of the energy sector. His profile reflects a strong integration of scientific research, strategic leadership, and real-world implementation across renewable energy, smart grids, electric mobility, and energy infrastructure systems. His research addresses critical challenges related to the energy transition, including the deployment of renewable energy sources, integration of photovoltaic power with electric mobility, digitalization of power systems, smart grid development, and the application of artificial intelligence in energy automation. A central theme of his work is the economic and managerial optimization of energy systems, emphasizing policy design, financial engineering, investment strategies, and governance models that support sustainable and resilient energy infrastructures, particularly in Southeast Europe. Professor Zinoviev has contributed extensively to the scientific literature, authoring over 50 peer-reviewed articles, books, and academic publications covering renewable energy systems, energy transmission and distribution, storage technologies, digital power solutions, and energy market transformation. His research outputs demonstrate a balance between theoretical frameworks and applied solutions, supporting evidence-based decision-making for governments, industry stakeholders, and international organizations. In addition to scholarly publications, he has played a key role in large-scale international research projects, including participation in European Union–funded initiatives addressing just energy transition, regional development, and climate neutrality. His work on photovoltaic power generation and electric mobility integration provides important insights into decarbonizing transport systems and enhancing grid flexibility. These contributions strengthen the alignment between energy policy objectives and technological deployment. Professor Zinoviev’s research profile is further distinguished by his extensive engagement with industry-driven innovation. He has led and contributed to numerous renewable energy and infrastructure projects, including solar, wind, biomass, and smart grid implementations, translating research findings into operational energy systems. This strong industry linkage enhances the practical relevance and societal impact of his academic work. Beyond research, he is actively involved in graduate and postgraduate education, contributing to curriculum development and teaching in energy economics, smart grids, and energy project management. His academic leadership supports the training of future professionals capable of navigating complex energy transitions. Overall, Professor Vladimir Zinoviev’s research profile reflects interdisciplinary expertise, international collaboration, and sustained impact at the intersection of energy science, economics, and policy. His work contributes meaningfully to advancing sustainable energy systems, supporting climate goals, and shaping modern energy governance frameworks.

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View Google Scholar Profile

Featured Publications


Charging Infrastructure and E-mobility Integration: Economic and Energy Benefits for Sustainable Grid Management

– International Conference on Communications, Information, Electronic, 2024

Chinedu Okere | Engineering | Best Researcher Award

Dr. Chinedu Okere | Engineering | Best Researcher Award 

University of Houston | United States

Dr. Chinedu (Junior) Okere is a dynamic early-career researcher whose interests span subsurface hydrogen generation, large-scale hydrogen storage in geological formations, experimental and numerical modelling of CO₂ capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS), methane leakage from orphaned wells, and drilling/fracturing fluid design and formation-damage mitigation in petroleum reservoirs. His professional trajectory has taken him from graduate research at the China University of Petroleum (Beijing) (M.Eng., 2022) to doctoral studies at the Texas Tech University (Ph.D., 2025) and onward to a post-doctoral appointment in the Department of Petroleum Engineering at the University of Houston (from mid-2025). In these roles he has supervised PhD students, managed a U.S. Department of Energy-funded CarbonSAFE project on CO₂ storage, and led the development of grant proposals, patents and peer-reviewed publications. According to his Google Scholar profile he has to date achieved 659 citations and an h-index of 15, with an i10-index of 19. His publication record includes a broad spectrum of articles (20+, depending on counting method) covering topics from “clean hydrogen generation from petroleum reservoirs” to fuzzy-ball fluid‐induced damage in tight reservoirs, reservoir suitability for hydrogen storage, and methane leakage from abandoned wells. Most recently, his first‐author papers (2024-2025) address techno-economic feasibility of in-situ hydrogen production from petroleum reservoirs, SARA-based experimental and numerical investigations of in-situ hydrogen generation, and comparative numerical studies for optimisation of hydrogen production and CCUS strategies. In recognition of his impact he has received numerous honours including the 2024 International Inventions Awards – Hydrogen Energy Best Researcher Award, and the Society of Petroleum Engineers Permian Basin Scholarship. With strong interdisciplinary credentials spanning petroleum engineering, energy systems, reservoir simulation, and hydrogen/CCUS technologies, Dr. Okere stands out as an emerging scholar bridging the conventional oil-&-gas domain with the clean/hydrogen energy transition. His h-index of 15 reflects a solid early‐career impact: it means he has at least 15 publications each cited at least 15 times. (The h-index concept was originally proposed by J. E. Hirsch as a simple measure of productivity and citation impact. Going forward, his strong publication momentum, growing citation base and leadership in grant/industry-adjacent projects suggest that he is well-positioned to further increase both his research output and influence in the hydrogen/CCUS engineering community.

Profiles: Scopus | Orcid | Google Scholar 

Featured Publications

Okere, C. J., & Sheng, J. J. (2023). Review on clean hydrogen generation from petroleum reservoirs: Fundamentals, mechanisms, and field applications. International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, 101.

Edouard, M. N., Okere, C. J., Ejike, C., Dong, P., & Suliman, M. A. M. (2023). Comparative numerical study on the co-optimization of CO₂ storage and utilization in EOR, EGR, and EWR: Implications for CCUS project development. Applied Energy, 347, 121448.

Eyitayo, S. I., Okere, C. J., Hussain, A., Gamadi, T., & Watson, M. C. (2024). Synergistic sustainability: Future potential of integrating produced water and CO₂ for enhanced carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS). Journal of Environmental Management, 351, 119713.

He, J., Okere, C. J., Su, G., Hu, P., Zhang, L., Xiong, W., & Li, Z. (2021). Formation damage mitigation mechanism for coalbed methane wells via refracturing with fuzzy-ball fluid as temporary blocking agents. Journal of Natural Gas Science and Engineering, 90, 103956.

Okere, C. J., Su, G., Zheng, L., Cai, Y., Li, Z., & Liu, H. (2020). Experimental, algorithmic, and theoretical analyses for selecting an optimal laboratory method to evaluate working fluid damage in coal bed methane reservoirs. Fuel, 282, 118513.

Tao, X., Okere, C. J., Su, G., & Zheng, L. (2022). Experimental and theoretical evaluation of interlayer interference in multi-layer commingled gas production of tight gas reservoirs. Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering, 208, 109731.

Okere, C. J., & Sheng, J. J. (2024). A new modelling approach for in-situ hydrogen production from heavy oil reservoirs: Sensitivity analysis and process mechanisms. Energy, 302, 131817.

Opara, S. U., & Okere, C. J. (2024). A review of methane leakage from abandoned oil and gas wells: A case study in Lubbock, Texas, within the Permian Basin. Energy Geoscience, 5(3), 100288.