Australian iron ore miner Fortescue Metals Group announced on Tuesday a USD 6.2 billion plan to eliminate fossil fuels and carbon emissions from its operations by the end of the decade. The world's fourth-largest iron ore producer expects to save USD 818 million a year from 2030 based on current prices of diesel, gas and carbon credits, said a Fortescue statement to the Australian Securities Exchange. Most of the spending is planned for 2024-28.

It includes an additional 2-to-3 gigawatts of renewable energy generation and battery storage as well as a green mining fleet of trucks and trains. The target by 2030 of "real zero terrestrial emissions" -- no fossil fuels and with only temporary, if any, offsets -- would prevent 3 million metric tons (3.3 million U.S. tons) of carbon dioxide-equivalent greenhouse gas emissions a year. Fortescue is a member of the First Movers Coalition, a platform launched by the U.S.
State Department and the World Economic Forum last year for companies to harness their buying power and supply chains to nurture early markets for innovative clean energy technologies. Other big companies are also stepping up moves to cut their carbon emissions. Last week, Samsung Electronics announced it was shifting away from fossil fuels and aiming to entirely power its global operations with clean electricity by 2050. Fortescue chairman Andrew Forrest said Fortescue, based in Perth, Western Australia state, was already benefiting financially from a decarbonization policy that began two years ago.
The new decarbonization strategy has "set an example that a post-fossil fuel era is good commercial common sense," Forrest said in a statement. "There's no doubt that the energy landscape has changed dramatically over the past two years and this change has accelerated since Russia invaded Ukraine," Forrest said.
"Consistent with Fortescue's disciplined approach to capital allocation, this investment in renewable energy and decarbonization is expected to generate attractive economic returns for our shareholders through energy cost savings and a sharp reduction in carbon offset purchases, together with a lower risk-cost profile and improvement in the integrity of our assets," Forrest added.
Australia's new center-left Labor Party government has enacted a law setting a target to reduce the nation's greenhouse gas emissions by 42% below 2005 levels by the end of the decade. Under the previous conservative government, Australia had been branded a laggard on climate action over its target to reduce emissions by only 26%-28% by 2030.
(PTI)
More From GoodReturns

Gold Rate in India Rises Over Rs 37,000/24K in Three Days; Will Jump in Gold Price Today Continue on 31 March?

Gold Rate Today Continues Rally, 24K Jumps Over Rs 35000 in 2 Days; 22K & 18K Gold, Silver Prices in Delhi

LPG Gas Cylinder Prices Hiked Again From April 1; 19 KG LPG Gets Costlier By Rs 218; 14.2 KG LPG Unchanged

New PAN Card Rules From April 1, 2026: How To Apply For New PAN Card Via Protean, E-Filing Portal?

5 New Shares On One Soon: Anil Agarwal's Vedanta Demerger To Take Place in April, Says Report

Fresh Drop in Gold Rate Today; Silver Stable: Latest 22K, 24K, 18K Gold & Silver Prices in Delhi on 30 March

Govt Approves PDS Kerosene Distribution in 21 States for 60 Days, Sets 5,000 L Storage Limit Amid LPG Crisis

Gold Rate in India After 20% Slide from Record Highs; Will Gold Price Today Jump to Rs 1.50 Lakh on 30 March?

Bank Holiday Today, Tomorrow & More: Banks Are Closed On March 31, April 1, April 2, April 3; Here's Why

Bank Holiday In April 2026: Banks To Be Closed For 14 Days; Good Friday, Baisakhi To Akshaya Tritiya

Gold Price in India Rallies Rs 47400/100 Gm in 5 Days Amid Rupee Fall, Iran-US War, Silver Shines | March 31



Click it and Unblock the Notifications