Fortescue sees $6 bln bill to ditch fossil fuels by AFP Staff Writers Sydney (AFP) Sept 20, 2022 Australian mining giant Fortescue on Tuesday said it is putting aside US$6.2 billion to wean itself off fossil fuels by the end of the decade, hoping to gain a head start on competitors. The Perth-headquartered company told investors that a goal of achieving zero emissions on mining iron ore operations by 2030 would come with a hefty price tag, but insisted it still made business sense. "We must accelerate our transition to the post-fossil fuel era," said executive chairman Andrew Forrest, promising decarbonisation would lower costs and offer a better return for shareholders in the long term. The company estimates that it can cut three million tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions each year, and save almost a billion dollars on fuel and carbon credits. The capital investment could be recouped by 2034, the company said. Fortescue is one of the world's largest miners of iron ore -- the main ingredient for making steel. Its shares slipped 0.6 percent in Sydney on Tuesday afternoon.
Greenpeace blocks unloading of Russian gas in Finland Helsinki (AFP) Sept 17, 2022 Activists from environmental group Greenpeace on Saturday blocked a shipment of Russian gas from unloading at a liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal in northern Finland, the terminal owner and Greenpeace said. The activists demanded Helsinki stop importing Russian gas after Russia's President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine more than six months ago. "The shipment contained liquefied natural gas coming from Russia," a spokeswoman for Finnish company Gasum that imported the blocked gas, Olga Vaisan ... read more
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