| Fortescue strikes green hydrogen deal with German polymer producer 
 Michael Mazengarb 17 January 2022   1
 
 
  Covestro's technical center Leverkusen, Germany (photo supplied).
 
 Fortescue   Future Industries has progressed its efforts to establish itself as a   leading global supplier of green hydrogen after lining up a potential   supply deal with German polymer producer Covestro.
 
 FFI announced  on Monday that it had signed a memorandum of  understanding for the  supply Covestro – which produces a range of raw  polyurethane and  polycarbonate materials – with up to 100,000 tonnes of  green hydrogen  annually to replace existing supplies of fossil hydrogen  starting in  2024.
 
 FFI chairman Andrew Forrest said the MoU – which will see  the two  companies negotiate the terms of a supply deal – had the  potential to  deliver significant reductions in greenhouse gas emissions  at the  polymer producer’s facilities across Asia, North America and  Europe.
 
 “This is a ground-breaking collaboration which  reinforces the power  of green hydrogen to accelerate the  decarbonisation of some of the most  energy-intensive industries around  the world,” Forrest said.
 
 “FFI and Covestro share the belief  that green hydrogen and green  ammonia will play a crucial role in  enabling companies to reach their  climate targets and preventing  runaway global warming.
 
 “We look forward to working with  Covestro to supply their green  hydrogen needs and collaborating with  Germany to enable it to become the  world leader in global  decarbonisation, green hydrogen and ammonia.”
 
 Covestro,  headquartered in the German city of Leverkusen, produces  high-tech  polymer materials, including polyurethane and polycarbonates,  used in a  range of commercial and consumer goods. Polyurethane made by  Covestro  was used in the production of the official footballs used at  the 2014  FIFA World Cup.
 
 Covestro CEO, Markus Steilemann, said that the  non-binding agreement  with FFI could ultimately help the company  improve the sustainability of  its products and cut its greenhouse gas  emissions footprint by up to  900,000 tonnes per year.
 
 “Our  collaboration with FFI underlines our ambition to pioneer the   transition towards a circular economy and climate-neutral production.   Green hydrogen and its derivatives play a key role for the chemical   industry, both as an alternative feedstock and a source of clean   energy,” Steilemann said.
 
 “The transition towards green hydrogen  and its derivatives will be an  important step forward in our efforts  to offer more sustainable  products that also reduce the carbon  footprint of our customer  industries.”
 
 The agreement follows several recent deals struck by FFI as part of its push into green hydrogen production and use.
 
 This includes a plan to convert   part of a New Zealand oil refinery to operate as a green hydrogen production facility and to provide a   potential lifeline to a Brisbane ammonia factory through the supply of renewable hydrogen after the plant struggled to secure affordable supplies of fossil gas.
 
 Just before Christmas,   FFI revealed it had built its own operational electrolyser for hydrogen production   as a demonstration of Fortescue’s ability to deploy its engineering   resources to develop solutions in the clean energy space, alongside its   operations in the resources sector.
 
 FFI has expressed ambitions  of becoming one of the world’s largest  manufacturers of electrolyser  equipment, securing planning approval to  build a   gigawatt scale facility in Gladstone in Queensland.
 
 FFI’s investments in green hydrogen production are in effect being   funded by the profits of the parent Fortescue Metals Group – Australia’s   third-largest iron ore producer – which has pledged to re-invest 10  per  cent of its earnings into the green energy offshoot.   In 2021, this amounted to more than $1 billion.
 
 The resources company has set itself a goal to produce 15 million   tonnes of green hydrogen annually by the end of this decade, growing to   50 million tonnes annually by 2040 – eyeing an early opportunity to   establish itself as a dominant player in a burgeoning global market for   green hydrogen.
 
 FFI CEO Julie Shuttleworth said the latest deal  showed the potential  for green hydrogen to create opportunities for  decarbonisation in  otherwise tricky industries for cutting emissions.
 
 “Covestro is a global leader in its field with its materials used in   nearly every area of modern life, including in the automotive,   construction and electronics industries,” Shuttleworth said.
 
 “This collaboration reinforces that green hydrogen is a practical,   implementable solution for a range of difficult-to-decarbonise   industries.”
 
 reneweconomy.com.au
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