“Commercial nonsense:” Andrew Forrest explains why he wants to dump fossil fuels
 
  
    Sophie Vorrath 
  26 March 2021 
    Iron  ore billionaire Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest has detailed his  company’s  plans to produce the world’s lowest cost green hydrogen and  green  ammonia via a potential pipeline of 1000 gigawatts of renewable  energy  assets, in a speech to analysts he said aimed to herald “massive   change.”
   Speaking at the Credit Suisse Asian Investment  Conference in Hong  Kong on Wednesday night, Forrest said the green  hydrogen market had the  potential to create revenues of more than $US12  trillion by 2050, “more  than any industry which ever existed today.”
    And the founder and chair of Fortescue Metals Group, and the recent   future-focused spin-off Fortescue Future Industries, said his group of   companies intended to lead the world in the the establishment and   success of this trillion-dollar industry.
   “I hope you’re going  to remember this evening as the heralding of  massive change, which you  can invest in, you can be part of, or you can  watch happen around you.  But it will happen,” Forrest said.
   “We see the future of energy  as hydrogen. I think our greatest  natural resource is no longer iron  ore, it isn’t gold, it isn’t oil, and  it’s certainly not coal.
    “The question is not whether green hydrogen will become the next  global  energy form, it’s just a question of by whom. …Who will mass  produce,  have a ship leaving the port every half an hour on a scale of  the  greatest energy companies in the world?
  “Which company would be  that strong, that we could allocate  sufficient risk to test green  hydrogen at global industrial scale? Last  year the board and I at  Fortescue Metals Group decided that would be  Fortescue.”
   Forrest has been making his plans for green hydrogen global domination headline news for some time now, including in an   announcement just over a week ago that FMG would begin producing green hydrogen at commercial scale as early as 2023.
    At the same time, Forrest also announced that his group of companies   would aim to achieve carbon neutrality on its scope 1 and 2 emissions by   2030, bringing the target forward 10 years, mostly through absolute   emissions reduction rather than the use of offsets.
   Speaking at  the Credit Suisse forum this week, Forrest reiterated the  company’s  green hydrogen ambitions, including the identification and  development  of a renewable energy pipeline with as much as 1000  gigawatts of  potential, starting with 40GW in the Pilbara and up to  500GW of assets  in South America.
  “We’re looking for 500GW of energy assets in  South America, alone,  and potentially thousands of gigawatts there to  follow,” he said.
   “We aim to produce or help to produce and  provide over 1000  gigawatts, as Fortescue, zero emissions, clean energy  that is available  for consumption, straightaway,” he told the forum.
    “But no pollution, and not because we’re great people with great   hearts, but ’cause to do anything else is a commercial nonsense.”
   As RenewEconomy’s   James Fernyhough noted   here, however, Forrest’s grand renewables-based plans are so far  mostly  on paper, with only the soon-to-be opened 60MW Chichester solar  farm  and a new 150MW solar project, both to help power FMG’s Pilbara  mines,  identified to date.
   But Forrest assured the audience at  the forum this week that by June  30 this year, Fortescue’s green  hydrogen plans would go up several  gears.
   “We’ll develop green  iron ore, trains, we’ll run our trucks on  renewable electricity. Our  ships will begin the transition to green  ammonia, and this financial  year, at least five years ahead of our  competition, we will put green  ammonia into a …ship’s engine, one which  will allow that really dirty  fuel, Bunker C oil, to finally be  extinguished, to not pollute the  world’s oceans,” Forrest said.
   “I’m saying to you with absolute  certainty, the green energy future  and the green product future is upon  us. There will be a huge green  steel industry. There will be a huge  green fertiliser industry. There  will be a huge green energy industry,  and it’s up to you to choose where  you want to be in that. Or if you  want to stay with fossil fuels.”
   reneweconomy.com.au |