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Home Topics Minerals Critical Minerals Australia’s Fortescue signs $2.8 billion green equipment deal with Liebherr
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Australia’s Fortescue signs $2.8 billion green equipment deal with Liebherr

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FILE PHOTO: An autonomous truck readies to pick up a load of iron ore at Australia's Fortescue Metals Group (FMG) Chichester Hub, which includes the Christmas Creek iron ore mine, in the Pilbara region, located southeast of the coastal town of Port Hedland in Western Australia, November 29, 2018. REUTERS/Melanie Burton/File Photo/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Fortescue signs deal for zero-emission mining fleets. An autonomous truck readies to pick up a load of iron ore at Australia's Fortescue Metals Group (FMG) Chichester Hub, which includes the Christmas Creek iron ore mine, in the Pilbara region, located southeast of the coastal town of Port Hedland in Western Australia, November 29, 2018. REUTERS/Melanie Burton/File Photo/File Photo

Fortescue said on Wednesday it has signed a $2.8 billion partnership with German-Swiss equipment manufacturer Liebherr to create one of the world’s largest zero-emission mining fleets.

The two companies had initially signed the deal to develop green technology-based trucks to haul iron ore out of Fortescue’s mines in 2022 and have now agreed to increase the mining fleet – to be supplied by Liebherr – to 475 trucks from earlier 120.

Fortescue, the world’s fourth-largest iron ore miner, expects to buy 360 autonomous battery-electric trucks, 55 electric excavators and 60 battery-powered dozers to replace about two-thirds of its current mining fleet.

The company’s mining fleet consumed about 450 million litres of diesel in FY24 and accounted for 51% of its scope 1 carbon emissions.

The iron ore miner has been exploring various strategies to produce green iron – the iron produced with a lower carbon footprint, while also expanding into production of hydrogen from renewable resources.

“This is an important next step in our 2030 Real Zero target – to eliminate emissions from our Australian terrestrial iron ore operations by the end of the decade. The world needs Real Zero now – it simply cannot afford to wait,” Fortescue Executive Chairman Andrew Forrest said in a statement.

(Reporting by Himanshi Akhand in Bengaluru; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta and Mohammed Safi Shamsi)

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