by Watchman » 05 Jun 2025 09:17
Fortescue is on a mission to achieve “Real Zero” under the able leadership of Dr Andrew Forrest. As such, it needs to reduce not just the carbon emissions in its Pilbara (Western Australia) mining operations, but also the shipping of that iron ore around the world. In 2025, that is expected to be approximately 200 million metric tons. Fortescue’s FY23 Climate Change Report indicates they emit over 2.5 million tonnes of CO2 annually from their iron ore operations and shipping. Curtailing that much CO2 is a big job.
CleanTechnica has reported on Fortescue’s efforts in mining and shipping, here. Recently, the mining giant reported on its next step in the quest for CO2 free shipping, fuelling its massive ore carriers with ammonia. But, is green ammonia the answer?
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[img]https://cleantechnica.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/Fortescue-shipping-ammonia-1536x854.jpeg[/img]
Fortescue is on a mission to achieve “Real Zero” under the able leadership of Dr Andrew Forrest. As such, it needs to reduce not just the carbon emissions in its Pilbara (Western Australia) mining operations, but also the shipping of that iron ore around the world. In 2025, that is expected to be approximately 200 million metric tons. Fortescue’s FY23 Climate Change Report indicates they emit over 2.5 million tonnes of CO2 annually from their iron ore operations and shipping. Curtailing that much CO2 is a big job.
CleanTechnica has reported on Fortescue’s efforts in mining and shipping, here. Recently, the mining giant reported on its next step in the quest for CO2 free shipping, fuelling its massive ore carriers with ammonia. But, is green ammonia the answer? [b][size=150][url=https://cleantechnica.com/2025/06/03/fortescue-determined-to-decarbonise-international-shipping/]CONTINUE READING[/url][/size][/b]