Fortescue on Tuesday took an equal top ownership stake in green hydrogen technology venture Sparc Hydrogen as it committed to pilot testing a novel production technique in Adelaide later this year. The Sparc Hydrogen initiative aims to commercialise technology for producing green hydrogen directly from sunlight using research from the University of Adelaide and Flinders…
Australia’s largest electrolyser manufacturing facility was opened by federal Industry and Science minister Ed Husic and Queensland Premier Steven Miles in Gladstone on Monday. Fortescue’s 13,000 m² facility will produce over 2GW of proton exchange membrane (PEM) electrolysers annually through an automated assembly line, according to the firm. The Green Energy Manufacturing Centre will support…
On a day of dramatic senior leadership changes at Fortescue Metals Group, former CSIRO chief executive Larry Marshall has been appointed to the company’s board of directors. Fortescue Metals also announced the apparently amicable departure of its chief executive officer Fiona Hick, and the expedited appointment of Dino Otranto to replace her. The company said…
Fortescue will manufacture electrolysers developed in-house at its $114 million production facility being developed in Gladstone following the collapse of its partnership with US-based supplier Plug Power. Although Plug Power Electrolysers will not be produced from the facility, they may still be supplied to other Fortescue projects, according to Fortescue Future Industries (FFI) chief executive…
Andrew Forrest’s $9 billion package to accelerate the decarbonisation of iron ore giant Fortescue’s operations by 2030 includes the mass deployment of more renewable energy as part of an accelerated plan “to transition to the post fossil fuel era.” The US$6.2 billion (AU$9.24 million) will be mostly invested in financial years 2024-28 and includes the…
Fortescue has announced the development on an electric train that recharges itself using gravity, as the Australian resources giant finalises its acquisition of UK-based Williams Advanced Engineering. Fortescue is dedicating $50 million, in partnership with Williams Advanced Engineering (WAE), for research and development on the Infinity Train, which fully recharges its battery using gravitational energy…
As the ground broke on the world’s largest electrolyser production facility, Fortescue Future Industries chairman Andrew Forrest announced Tattarang’s $3 billion acquisition of the largest renewables farm in the southern hemisphere. On Sunday Mr Forrest announced the acquisition of Clarke Creek wind, solar and battery farm while attending the sod-turning ceremony for the construction of…
It’s not every year the prestigious Boyer Lecture prompts the need for an ASX market disclosure document to be filed with the exchange.
But that was the case with Andrew Forrest’s Fortecue Metals Group revealed the depth of global ambitions to develop massive renewable power resources to produce green hydrogen.
Mr Forrest also used the lecture to unveil plans to build a ‘green’ steel pilot plant this year, with a commercial plant in the Pilbara powered entirely by wind and solar in the next several years.
Green steel: Andrew Forrest has revealed the depth of ambitions in renewables Photo: Fortescue
Fortescue published the full transcript of the lecture in a letter to the ASX largely because the speech revealed net profit after tax of over US$940 million for the month of December 2020 based on preliminary unaudited management accounts.
But the strength of commitment to renewables, hydrogen and ultimately to the production of green steel will have surprise some. You can listen to the full audio of the Mr Forrest’s first Boyer Lecture here.
Fortescue would become a ‘first-mover’ on green hydrogen and other green product businesses including steel, Mr Forrest said. Based on the strength of the Fortescue balance sheet, the company could become a major contributor to climate innovation.
“[Fortecue] has a market capitalisation of less than 60 billion US dollars – but it made a net profit, after tax, of over 940 million US dollars – just last month,” he said.
“Based on this position of strength, the Fortescue leadership recently decided to have a crack at becoming one of the world’s largest green energy and product businesses.
“To catalyse a global solution to climate change – by rapidly increasing the supply of green hydrogen.”
A team from Fortescue has been on the road across the world since August last year testing the appetite for green energy investment and came back to Australia with a galvanised view of the investment potential for renewables and green hydrogen production.
“The question wasn’t whether green hydrogen would become the next global energy form – it was which company would have the resilience to take the risk and truly test green hydrogen at global, industrial scale?
“The board and I decided Fortescue would be that first mover. We are now undertaking feasibility studies that could lead to some 300 GW of power – more than four times what Australia can produce,” Mr Forrest said.
“We have targeted hydro-electricity – generated by rivers – and geothermal, which taps into the heat from the Earth’s core – these renewables work around the clock – yet solar is currently the cheapest form of energy in the world.”
“Our final aim is 1,000 gigawatts of zero-emissions energy. It sounds daunting, and naysayers are everywhere. But as someone who’s made a career out of doing what other people said was impossible, this doesn’t feel any different,” he said.
Fortescue is trialling two separate ways of producing steel without coal. The company aims to start building Australia’s first green steel pilot plant this year, with a commercial plant in the Pilbara – powered entirely by wind and solar, in the next few years.
The economic upside for Australia is massive and arrives at a time when the country faces large-scale job losses in the coal sector.
“Australia is in an absolutely unique position to scale green steel,” Mr Forrest said. “We could look at losing our coal industry as a national disaster – yet I’ve always believed out of every setback, is the seed of equal or greater opportunity.”
“We produce over 40 per cent of the world’s iron ore. And our potential green energy and hydrogen resources are immeasurable.
“If Australia were to capture just 10 per cent of the world’s steel market, we could generate well over 40,000 jobs – more than what’s required to replace every job in the coal industry.
“Not any old jobs, but similar jobs – construction workers, mechanics, electricians, engineers – all of the sectors that’ll be hit when coal is phased out.”