Fortescue to produce green hydrogen from 2023, and targets green steel
 
  
    James Fernyhough 15 March 2021    6
  Iron   ore billionaire Andrew Forrest says his company, Fortescue Metals,   hopes to be producing green hydrogen at commercial scale as early as   2023, and plans to use much of that hydrogen to make green steel in   Australia.
   He also announced the company would now aim to  achieve carbon  neutrality on its scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2030,  bringing the target  forward 10 years. Most of that would be done  through absolute emissions  reduction rather than the use of offsets.
   Both targets will require a rapid upscale of Fortescue’s renewable capacity. The company   has huge ambitions in this area,   and says it has identified a 300 gigawatt pipeline of potential,   including 40GW in the Pilbara, and hopes to build as much 1,000GW in the   longer-term.
   But so far few are up and running, with only the  soon-to-be opened  60MW Chichester solar farm and a new 150MW solar  project, both to help  power its Pilbara mines, identified to date.  Monday’s announcement  contained no major new project announcements.
    In a wide ranging call with media on Monday, Forrest called it “an   historical day,” as he predicted many more large industrial players   would follow Fortescue in embracing net-zero technologies.
   Asked  when Fortescue would start bringing green hydrogen to market in   Australia, he said the company was currently working with governments   to get the approvals needed and was “working hard towards” production by   2023.
      While hydrogen has immense appeal as a carbon-free  alternative to  fossil fuels, doubt has been cast on its viability in  some sectors,  particularly against electrification, which is much more  energy  efficient.
   A   recent report from the International Council on Clean Transportation found that green electricity would prove significantly cheaper than hydrogen for heating homes in Europe, while   Volkwagen chief Herbert Diess last week dismissed the idea the hydrogen fuel cells would ever compete with battery electric vehicles.
    But Forrest said there would be a major role for green hydrogen and   ammonia in industries such as heavy transport, including road, rail and   shipping, as well as steel production. And he insisted demand would   follow supply.
   “We aim to provide the two missing links in the  climate change battle  – creating both the demand for and supply of  green hydrogen and green  ammonia,” he said.
  The company is  trialling green ammonia in shipping and locomotives,  hydrogen fuel cell  power for drill rigs, and large battery technology in  its haul trucks.  It is also trialling a technology that uses renewable  energy to  convert iron ore to green iron at low temperatures, without  the use of  coal.
   Forrest re-asserted his belief that Australia should be a  green  steel-making nation and that, provided the economics stacked up,   Fortescue would become a vertically integrated green steelmaker, using   the green hydrogen generated from its own renewable energy capacity to   transform the iron ore that it mines in the Pilbara into steel.
    “The technology in this space is changing super fast,” he said. “Once   the world started to look at the fact that there’s other ways to make   steel – we don’t have to just accept it has to be coal-based – then   innovative technologies have started to spring up everywhere. I think we   have a chance of Fortescue being on the leading edge of that.
    “I do see Fortescue having a really serious advantage – it has the   resources, it has the energy, it has the iron ore, it has the people, it   has the capital to lead a new industry which the world, frankly,  really  badly needs.”
   He dismissed predictions from other iron  ore miners that  metallurgical coal would still be used in 30 years,  predicting it would  be replaced entirely by green hydrogen by 2050.
    “You have never had an abundant supply of a coal alternative, and   until you have an abundance of something you can’t have a demand for it.   Think of the Internet. [You] didn’t have any demand until it existed.   We are creating a supply of green fuels through green hydrogen, green   ammonia and direct green electricity which didn’t exist before.
    “Former calculations have been made without today’s historic   announcement. As of today’s announcement, all of those calculations will   have to change.”
   Fortescue also announced on Monday it would  start linking executive  pay to its emissions targets, providing an  extra incentive to hit the  2030 goal.
   Asked about the use of  offsetting residual emissions through  activities like tree-planting  Forrest said: “We’re not ruling it out,  but we are working really hard  to limit its use. As Bill gates says,  there is no point in thinking you  are helping reduce the carbon  footprint of the planet by planting a  tree where a tree would grow  anyway.”
   The carbon neutrality  target only applies to scope 1 and 2 emissions.  Scope 3 emissions are  Fortescue’s largest, because they include the  emissions created in the  steelmaking process. Globally, steelmaking   accounts for something like  7 to 9 per cent of global industrial  emissions. Forrest said Fortescue  was addressing scope 3 by creating a  market for green hydrogen.
   reneweconomy.com.au |