Ms Caroline Stott

Caroline Stott


Position:

Associate Director, Enterprise (Energy Transitions)

Department:

Research Partnerships

Areas of research & interest:

  • Agriculture & food
  • Batteries & storage
  • Behaviour change
  • Biodiversity & conservation
  • Built environment
  • Carbon offsets & markets
  • Circular economy
  • Climate change
  • Communications
  • Communities & society
  • Critical minerals & resources
  • Economics & business
  • Education
  • Emissions reduction
  • Energy & fuels
  • Environment
  • First Peoples
  • Health
  • Hydrogen
  • International relations
  • Land use & planning
  • Policy & regulation
  • Social issues
  • Sustainability
  • Technology & innovation
  • Transport
  • Tourism
  • Workforce & training

Topics:

  • Agriculture & environment
  • Battery & energy storage
  • Carbon & environmental markets
  • Communities in transition
  • Emissions reduction & sequestration
  • Energy & infrastructure
  • First Nations
  • Green investment
  • Hydrogen & fuels
  • Industry & business solutions
  • Nature based solutions
  • Policy & regulation
  • Technology solutions
  • Transport
  • Land Use & Regional Planning

Research Institution:


BIO

With a focus on energy transitions, Caroline Stott connects researchers with industry and government partners to explore collaborative research activities, establish commercial partnerships and develop scalable business models. Caroline has held management and commercialisation roles at Queensland University of Technology, Griffith University, The University of Queensland, the International Energy Centre and the Brandenburg University of Technology (in Germany). She has a strong understanding of strategic research initiatives and large-scale engagements within university environments. She is adept at aligning internal capability with external opportunities to grow research capacity, further the impact and translation of research, and support long-term, mutually beneficial partnerships. Caroline holds undergraduate degrees in Science (Biomedical Science) and Arts (Economics and German), and a Master’s in Project Management. She was formerly Chair of the Future Energy Leaders group within the Energy Policy Institute of Australia.