Companies – NS Energy https://www.nsenergybusiness.com - latest news and insight on influencers and innovators within business Tue, 05 Dec 2023 06:14:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7 Rockwell Automation Tue, 05 Dec 2023 06:14:13 +0000 https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/?post_type=storefronts&p=338543 The post Rockwell Automation appeared first on NS Energy.

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AGL’s Liddell power station closes after 52 years of operation https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/news/agls-liddell-power-station-closes-after-52-years-of-operation/ Mon, 01 May 2023 00:00:35 +0000 https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/?p=327499 The post AGL’s Liddell power station closes after 52 years of operation appeared first on NS Energy.

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AGL will today retire the Liddell Power Station in the NSW Upper Hunter region after almost 52 years of operation as it prepares to repurpose the site into an industrial renewable energy hub, including plans to build a 500 MW grid-scale battery at the site.

Opened in 1971, the Liddell Power Station has played a critical role in powering homes and businesses across the nation and has made a significant contribution to the Upper Hunter.

In thanking Liddell workers past and present, AGL Chief Executive Officer, Damien Nicks, celebrated the contribution that Liddell and its workers have made to the Upper Hunter region and the National Electricity Market, while highlighting the future transformation of the site into the Hunter Energy Hub as well as our engagement with the Wonnarua people.

“After providing the market with notice of closure more than seven years ago, Liddell has finally reached the end of its technical life and the time has now come to safely and respectfully retire the station and join the change to a cleaner future,” Mr Nicks said.

“Over the past 52 years, this power station has played an important role in shaping the Upper Hunter region, providing thousands of jobs for multiple generations of people and I thank them for the contribution they have made. The friendships and connections that have grown around the power station have helped create a thriving local community.

“Liddell has also played a significant role in powering Australian lives, on average, supplying enough electricity for more than one million homes over its lifespan.

“Today marks the end of one chapter for the site, but also the beginning of another with our plans to transform the site into the Hunter Energy Hub. The world is changing and so is AGL.

“We already have plans underway to build a 500 MW grid-scale battery on the site, a feasibility study into a hydrogen facility is underway, and we are also exploring options with potential partners in industries such as solar, wind, and waste-to-energy.

“The closure of Liddell and the repurposing of the site as an industrial renewable energy hub is an example of AGL’s climate transition plan in action – it will reduce AGL’s emissions by around 8 million tonnes per year – the equivalent to approximately 5 percent of emissions from Australia’s electricity sector in 2021.”

AGL Chief Operating Officer, Markus Brokhof, outlined the staged approach to demolition of the station and the emphasis on recycling and reusing materials.

“The demolition process is estimated to commence in early 2024 and take around two years to complete. More than 90 percent of the materials in the power station will be recycled, including 70,000 tonnes of steel which is more steel than there is in the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Critical infrastructure, such as transmission connections to the grid, will be retained as the site transitions into the Hunter Energy Hub,” Mr Brokhof said.

AGL Liddell General Manager, Len McLachlan, said that supporting the workforce and community has been at the centre of AGL’s approach.

“We made a commitment to no forced redundancies and to provide new roles for those that wanted them at Bayswater, and I’m proud this is what we have delivered,” Mr McLachlan said.

“Over half of our Liddell employees will transfer to Bayswater, with the rest deciding to take retirement – as they are at that point in life – or seek other opportunities. Today we celebrate the people of Liddell who have helped to power the nation over the past 52 years.”

Liddell electrical tradesperson, Jackson Channon, said for many of the workers Liddell is more than just a place of work.

“My grandfather drove one of the trucks when they were building Liddell, and my parents worked here – this place has meant a lot to my family, and for the people who work here, it’s like a community of mates. It’s a bittersweet day for many of us, but I’m looking forward to the new challenge when I move over to Bayswater,” Mr Channon said.

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Siemens Wed, 04 May 2022 13:54:20 +0000 https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/?post_type=storefronts&p=311291 The post Siemens appeared first on NS Energy.

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ENEXSA – Energy Expert Software Applications Fri, 12 Nov 2021 11:21:58 +0000 https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/?post_type=storefronts&p=303047 The post ENEXSA – Energy Expert Software Applications appeared first on NS Energy.

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Wind industry urges G20 countries to ‘get real’ on renewables https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/news/wind-industry-g20-countries/ https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/news/wind-industry-g20-countries/#respond Tue, 20 Jul 2021 15:12:15 +0000 https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/?p=296640 The post Wind industry urges G20 countries to ‘get real’ on renewables appeared first on NS Energy.

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The countries of the G20 have been urged by CEOs of leading wind industry companies to “get real” on renewables.

The 25 CEOs, which are representing members of the Global Wind Energy Coalition for COP26, have sent an open letter to leaders of the G20 calling on them to show leadership in the climate crisis by raising national ambitions and urgently laying out concrete plans for increased wind energy production to replace fossil fuels.

While the letter acknowledges some progress has been made in the energy transition, it claims current net-zero pledges from G20 countries still put the world on a 2.4C global warming pathway, which is above the required levels to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.

The CEOs also highlight that wind energy and renewables installations are currently falling “well short” of the trajectory needed to meet international climate goals, requiring “urgent action to improve energy policies”.

“G20 member countries represent more than 80% of global energy-related carbon emissions – so the leaders of these countries hold the power and public duty to transform the world’s energy system,” said Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) CEO Ben Backwell.

“These countries need to get serious about renewables and, in particular, wind energy as the clean energy solution with the most potential to help the world meet its Paris Agreement targets.”

 

Global wind capacity will fall “dramatically short” of the volumes required for net zero by 2050, say CEOs

The letter is signed by the leaders of the largest wind power companies – including Vestas Wind Systems, Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy, Ørsted, SSE, RWE, and Mainstream Renewable Power, as well as associations representing the industry in the UK, Europe, Brazil, China, Mexico, South East Asia and South Africa.

The signatories highlight that the recent roadmap from the International Energy Agency (IEA) shows that annual wind deployment must quadruple from 93 gigawatts (GW) in 2020 to 390GW in 2030 to meet a net zero by 2050 scenario.

Both the IEA and International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) are aligned in the total wind energy capacity required for a net-zero scenario, which is compatible with a 1.5C warming pathway, foreseeing a need for 8,265GW and 8,100GW by 2050.

If current growth rates for wind energy persist, the letter argues that global wind capacity will fall “dramatically short” of the volumes required for carbon neutrality by 2050, with installation shortfalls of as much as 43% by 2050.

“G20 countries have huge amounts of untapped wind power potential that can fulfil significant portions of national electricity demand, but they are barely scratching the surface of what they can deploy,” said Rebecca Williams, director of COP26 at GWEC.

“With the current pace of wind power installations across the world, forecasts show that we will only install less than half of the wind power capacity needed to get to net zero by 2050.”

 

Wind industry CEOs recommendations to G20 countries

To reach the necessary level of wind power deployment for a net-zero scenario by the mid-century, the letter makes six recommendations to the G20 nations.

It asks them to raise ambition for wind power at the national level; implement effective policy and regulatory frameworks for procurement and delivery of renewable energy; commit to rapid build-out of clean energy infrastructure including grids and transmission; agree effective and credible carbon pricing mechanisms; align national and regional finance flows with benchmarks for a net 1.5C-compliant pathway; and develop cohesive and inclusive policies that dedicate public resource to the shift to a net-zero economy.

In the past 20 years, wind energy has demonstrated its ability to increase production exponentially while reducing costs, create millions of skilled jobs and spur large-scale infrastructure investment.

But the letter emphasises that achieving the scale and speed of deployment needed to tap into these benefits and achieve net-zero ambitions is unrealistic under the present “business as usual” conditions, and unachievable without “decisive and urgent policy change” across the G20 countries.

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How Oxford PV plans to be a key player in a potential solar-powered all-electric future https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/features/oxford-pv/ https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/features/oxford-pv/#respond Mon, 19 Jul 2021 06:02:02 +0000 https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/?p=296457 The post How Oxford PV plans to be a key player in a potential solar-powered all-electric future appeared first on NS Energy.

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Oxford PV, which describes itself as “the perovskite company”, plans to be a key player in what it sees as the solar-powered all-electric future. James Varley, a writer for Modern Power Systems magazine, takes a look at how the company aims to reach that target.

 

Next year, if everything goes to plan, Oxford PV will become the first company to sell perovskite-silicon-based solar cells to the residential rooftop market. They will have a potentially game-changing efficiency, about 20% higher than the current incumbent technology, silicon-only cells.

Oxford PV employs a “tandem” concept in which a thin film of perovskite is applied to a conventional silicon primary (or bottom) cell (the perovskite thickness being about 1/200th of that of the silicon).

This tandem approach improves the ability to capture specific parts of the solar spectrum, particularly at the high-energy, blue end, meaning that the perovskite-on-silicon tandem cell has a theoretical efficiency limit of 43% vs 29% for silicon-only cells.

In practice, the average efficiency of residential silicon PV installed to date is in the range of 15-20%, while the “real world” maximum for silicon is estimated to be about 26%.

The early commercially produced Oxford PV tandem cells are expected to achieve an efficiency of about 27% initially, but the company anticipates steady improvements as the technology develops in the coming years. “We have a clear roadmap to take this technology beyond 30%,” says CEO Frank Averdung.

Dr Chris Case, CTO at Oxford PV, notes that since 2014, when the company decided to focus exclusively on the perovskite-Si tandem, it has boosted the efficiency of its solar cell roughly by one percentage point per year on average and has a path and the theoretical foundations to further develop this technology all the way to the high 30s.

A research cell employing the Oxford PV technology has already achieved 29.52% (as certified by the US National Renewable Energy Laboratory), a world record for perovskite-Si tandem cells and also better than any single-junction research cell (for which the current record, 29.2%, is held by a cell employing GaAs).

Perovskite was first discovered in its naturally occurring mineral form (CaTiO3) in 1839 (coincidentally the same year as the photovoltaic effect was first observed, Chris Case points out). But it is only in the last ten years or so that the huge potential of synthetic perovskites as a material for solar cells has been fully recognised.

Prof Henry Snaith, who co-founded Oxford PV in 2010 to commercialise solar technology transferred from his laboratory at the University of Oxford (and is the company’s chief scientific officer), has played a key role in this, notably via a paper published in Science in 2012, describing a viable solid-state solar cell technology employing metal halide perovskite.

Progress over the past 10 years has been remarkably rapid and perovskites are attracting increasing interest in the solar field.

Like all materials used in solar cell applications, perovskites – for which the generic chemical formula is ABX3, where A and B are cations and X is the anion – are semi-conductors.

Oxford PV
Progress over the past 10 years has been remarkably rapid and perovskites are attracting increasing interest in the solar field (Credit: Oxford PV)

“Perovskites will be ubiquitous in photonics and electronics for the next 50-100 years,” Chris Case believes. “It’s that stunning a material.”

From a materials science standpoint, “there is a uniqueness, that’s why it’s so good,” he adds. “Each of the atoms is oriented as a set of octahedra that are stacked on top of each other, and twisted. That twist allows ‘anomalous’ high photocurrent diffusion, and that’s pretty much unique to this structure, and people are exploiting this property…This stuff is great, it’s unbelievably transformative.”

Also, the materials used for synthetic perovskites are abundant, and the amount used per unit of cell output is very small. “So, from a resources standpoint, the technology is capable of being scaled to the many TW level,” says Case.

And as well as demonstrating record efficiency, cells and modules using the Oxford PV technology have also “passed externally measured industry-standard reliability tests from the International Electrotechnical Commission,” he adds.

 

The route to market

“The scientists have done their job,” says Frank Averdung. “They have identified the material. They have made the structure. They have worked at making it stable and have addressed concerns about durability and lifetime. The question we have to figure out an answer to now is: how do we commercialise it?”

The challenge is one that is faced by pretty much every start-up with something new, he says. “You have an established market. You have established market players. You have something significantly better. But how do you get people to embrace it? How do you make it happen?”

As he points out, the established players are multibillion-dollar companies and they have invested billions into a manufacturing infrastructure. “Are they really interested in scrapping all of that and doing something new?” asks Averdung.

The good news is that the Oxford PV tandem technology, with silicon as the primary cell, does not require the jettisoning of existing manufacturing technology and “does not disrupt the industry”, and this is a major benefit.

“When we put a thin film perovskite cell on top of the silicon ‘primary’ cell, it still has the same form factor and still looks like a conventional Si cell, but the output voltage is higher,” says Averdung. “You can use the same tools and insert them into the same modules. The panel size is the same. Everything is the same. But you get significantly more power out.”

In terms of appearance the end-user will not notice any major difference, except it will “look a little bit nicer”, he adds.

In 2015, Oxford PV demonstrated that the tandem cell was feasible, but needed to “bring it to the required form factor”, he explains, so required a pilot production line or “used factory”.

Just such a factory was found in Brandenburg an der Havel, Germany, and acquired in 2016. “It was way too large for us that time but was a perfect fit for our thin-film pilot line”, which was up and running in 2017,” says Averdung.

“The role of the pilot line was, and still is, essentially product optimisation, taking all the results from the Oxford lab and scaling them up form-factor-wise and carrying out industry-standard testing to verify that the cells are achieving the required reliability and long term stability, and meeting industry needs.”

For some years, Oxford PV worked with a joint development partner, a very large company in the photovoltaics business, “basically telling us what the industry would want”, says Averdung.

But in 2018, he adds that “all that changed”, and the company decided the “best and fastest route to commercialisation of the technology would be to do it ourselves, enabling us to keep all the parameters of the technology under our control so we could be certain that the product, when it came to the market was a perfect fit to customer demands”.

This required the firm to find investors that would put money into it, enabling it to set up a manufacturing operation. “We were lucky”, says Averdung, as a number of supportive investors were found. The company’s major shareholders now include Equinor, Legal & General Capital, Goldwind and Meyer-Burger.

Oxford PV
Oxford PV tandem technology, with silicon as the primary cell, does not require the jettisoning of existing manufacturing technology (Credit: Twitter/Oxford PV)

The money put into the company by investors made it possible to upgrade the Brandenburg factory previously acquired and, in addition to the pilot line already there, establish a full tandem cell manufacturing line in a different part of the facility.

This will be the world’s first volume manufacturing line for perovskite-on-silicon tandem solar cells and is expected to achieve an initial target capacity of 100 megawatts (MW) around Q2 next year.

The cells are being sold to module makers (arrangements are already in place), and the initial target market is the “premium” residential rooftop sector. In this segment of the market, space is a critical constraint and the increased power density provided by the Oxford PV tandem cell is particularly attractive.

With much more electricity generated over the installation’s lifetime, there is a willingness to pay substantial premiums for high-efficiency modules, Oxford PV believes.

Averdung points out the costs of the cells account for a relatively small proportion of the total costs of a residential rooftop PV installation, so increased cell costs have only a relatively small effect on the overall economics compared with the benefits of increased output.

 

Towards the gigafactory

The 100-MW manufacturing line, and the residential rooftop market, are seen as just the beginning. Oxford PV’s vision is an all-electric world with perovskites as a mainstream solar technology. It is hoped the company’s latest funding round will give it “the means to plan the next step, which is a gigafactory”, says Averdung.

He hopes to have 2 gigawatts (GW) of production capacity in operation by the end of 2024 or thereabouts, and then to add about 2GW per year, reaching more than 10GW by the end of the decade.

Initially, the target market is, as already noted, the premium residential rooftop, but “this will change once we get into GW scale production, then we will be able to address, in addition, the small-commercial rooftop sector”, says Averdung, and “as soon as we move to 5GW and beyond, utility-scale is within reach”.

At utility-scale, “it is all about LCOE”, he observes, “assuming the cost of your land is manageable”, and at 5-GW production capacity “our LCOE will be more competitive than anyone else’s, but that will take a few years, of course”.

In the end “we intend to become one of the major players in photovoltaics”, says Averdung. And mastering what Chris Case calls the “magic” of perovskites could prove to be the key to achieving that ambition.

 

This article originally appeared in Modern Power Systems magazine

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Demand for green metals renews growth optimism for Canadian miners, says report https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/features/green-metals-canadian-miners/ https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/features/green-metals-canadian-miners/#respond Fri, 09 Jul 2021 06:02:44 +0000 https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/?p=296001 The post Demand for green metals renews growth optimism for Canadian miners, says report appeared first on NS Energy.

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Rising demand for green metals as the world transitions to clean energy is contributing to renewed optimism in the growth prospects for Canadian miners, says a report.

The analysis by KPMG in Canada notes that minerals such as lithium, cobalt and nickel are “critical” to the green and digital transition underway to achieve the goals of the Paris Agreement, which aims to cap the rise in global temperatures at “well below” 2C by 2100, with 1.5C being the ideal scenario.

The production of minerals needed to deploy wind, solar, geothermal power and energy storage is predicted to increase by nearly 500% by 2050, according to the World Bank.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates demand for lithium used in batteries, which help to power electric vehicles, is expected to expand by a factor of 30 by 2030.

 

Outlook for Canadian miners “extremely positive” following green metals demand

Heather Cheeseman, partner and Toronto mining leader at KPMG in Canada, said the outlook for the mining industry is “extremely positive”.

“The year-long rally in commodity prices, even with the recent volatility sparked by inflationary concerns, is driven not only by pandemic-induced supply chain issues but also climate-action demand for green metals and the massive spending expected on infrastructure,” she added.

But, Cheeseman warned their growth prospects could be dimmed by many factors, including how companies respond to environmental, social, and governance (ESG) risks, and technological transformation.

The report, titled Risk and Opportunities for Canadian miners, is based on a survey of 225 global mining companies, including 89 headquartered in Canada.

It revealed Canadian miners are far more concerned than their global peers about the “S” in ESG criteria by which investors evaluate sustainable, long-term financial returns.

The key findings include that 42% of Canadian miners ranked community relations and social licence to operate as the top ESG risk (24% globally), only 19% included environmental risk as a top risk (27% globally), and 90% agreed they need a clear, measurable ESG strategy (79% globally).

The pandemic is accelerating the focus on ESG, particularly on how credible, reliable, and accepted mining companies and projects are in the local communities where they operate, according to Cheeseman.

“The days of considering ESG factors as ‘soft’ secondary risks are long gone,” she added. “Investors are demanding miners have clear and measurable strategies in place. ESG now dominate boardroom conversations in every mining company, and mining leaders overwhelmingly agree this is a top priority.”

 

Nearly two-thirds of Canadian miners believe organic growth is important to expand over next three years

KPMG’s research also shows miners are focused on innovation and technology to help control costs and grow sustainably.

About a third of Canadian and global miners believe innovation and technological transformation will drive future growth and nearly half expect major technology disruption in the next three years, with four out of five viewing it as an opportunity instead of a threat.

But only a third of Canadian miners believe their organisation is actively disrupting the industry through digital innovation, compared to half of the global respondents – a trend the report notes could be an “issue for future competitiveness”.

“There is a distinct need to find ways to better manage costs and mitigate risks whether that’s through consolidation or embracing innovation,” said Cheeseman.

Nearly two-thirds of Canadian miners believe organic growth is important to expand over the next three years, compared to just over half of their global peers, according to the analysis.

It also shows that more than two in five (44%) Canadian miners cited merger and acquisition activity as important for growth versus 22% globally.

“The results may not be surprising given the numerous small- and medium-sized miners in Canada that may not have the ability to scale up or access capital to meet rising demand, embrace innovation or address growing ESG expectations,” said Cheeseman.

“Consolidation may provide the opportunity for many players to address these as well as drive efficiencies and lower costs.”

While access to capital had previously been a top risk, more Canadian miners now claim their ability to access equity financing has improved over the past year, largely due to investor interest in the green economy transition.

The report identified 10 risks for Canadian miners in 2021. The top five included commodity price risk concerns reflect ongoing volatility; global pandemic risk; community relations and social licence to operate strengthening in ESG agenda; permitting risk; and economic downturn/uncertainty.

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Rio Tinto and POSCO team up to develop low-carbon steel technologies https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/news/rio-tinto-posco-low-carbon-steel/ https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/news/rio-tinto-posco-low-carbon-steel/#respond Thu, 08 Jul 2021 17:01:40 +0000 https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/?p=295995 The post Rio Tinto and POSCO team up to develop low-carbon steel technologies appeared first on NS Energy.

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Rio Tinto and POSCO have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to jointly develop low-carbon steel technologies.

The move will see Rio, Australia’s second-largest miner, collaborate with South Korea’s biggest steel producer to explore, develop and demonstrate technologies that will enable the transition to a low-carbon emission steel value chain.

The partnership will explore a range of technologies for decarbonisation across the entire steel value chain from iron ore mining to steelmaking, including integrating Rio Tinto’s iron ore processing technology and POSCO’s steelmaking technology.

“This partnership with POSCO, a valued and long-standing customer, demonstrates our combined commitment to working together to identify ways to reduce emissions across the steelmaking process,” said Alf Barrios, Rio Tinto’s chief commercial officer.

“The agreement also complements Rio Tinto‘s partnerships with other customers as the industry focuses on developing technologies that support the transition to a low-carbon economy.”

 

Rio Tinto and POSCO both targeting net-zero emissions by 2050

Rio said the MoU with POSCO underlines its commitment to working in partnerships with customers on steel decarbonisation pathways and to invest in technologies that could deliver reductions in steelmaking carbon intensity of at least 30% from 2030 or with the potential to deliver carbon-neutral steelmaking pathways by 2050.

Both companies share the ambition to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050 as part of the global efforts to limit the impacts of climate change.

As one of South Korea’s largest industrial firms, POSCO’s efforts to decarbonise will play an important role in achieving the country’s ambition to become carbon neutral by 2050 – a target that has inspired Korean companies to accelerate their decarbonisation activities.

“Tackling climate change is a critical item in achieving sustainable development for a better future,” said Hag-Dong Kim, POSCO’s head of steel business unit.

“On the journey to achieving carbon neutrality with Rio Tinto, we can play an important role of finding a way to build a low-carbon steel industry.”

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TotalEnergies set for oil growth despite conflicting energy transition strategy https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/features/totalenergies-oil-energy-transition/ https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/features/totalenergies-oil-energy-transition/#respond Wed, 07 Jul 2021 12:23:47 +0000 https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/?p=295876 The post TotalEnergies set for oil growth despite conflicting energy transition strategy appeared first on NS Energy.

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TotalEnergies is set to experience oil growth in the near term despite its conflicting strategy as part of the ongoing energy transition.

The French multinational recently rebranded from Total SE to TotalEnergies following an almost unanimous decision by the company’s shareholders.

The rebranding comes as the firm aims to pull itself away from its traditional business practices that focused on oil and gas developments in order to become more of an all-encompassing energy company.

But, unlike its peers, TotalEnergies is forecast to see material growth in its oil production over the near term, according to analysis by data and analytics firm GlobalData.

“TotalEnergies has made significant strides to investing more heavily in its low carbon, renewables business, however, unlike most other major European oil and gas companies, TotalEnergies is forecast to see a rise in its oil production over the near term,” said Conor Ward, oil and gas analyst at GlobalData.

“Most of the European majors have made the commitment to pull back on oil developments and push their focus more towards gas and low-carbon technologies, while TotalEnergies is proving to still be committed to large scale oil developments and, within the next five years, oil production is forecast to grow.”

 

TotalEnergies set for steady growth in crude oil and condensate production despite energy transition strategy

Despite its ageing fields declining, TotalEnergies is forecast to experience steady growth in crude oil and condensate production through to 2025 from 1.2 million barrels per day (bpd) to 1.23 million bpd.

The largest portion of this growth is expected to come from its recently approved Ugandan assets surrounding Lake Albert in the west of the country, where TotalEnergies holds a 66.6% stake in a 230,000-bpd project.

“The company has a significant amount of crude oil and condensate production, which could come from unsanctioned projects such as Cameia in Angola, North Platte in the US, and Gato Do Mato in Brazil,” said Ward.

“However, based on the decision taken in Uganda and the company’s recent acquisition in Block 20 Angola, these projects may suffer delays if the company seeks to reduce its crude oil production.”

TotalEnergies has suggested it does not intend in the short term to reduce its scope 1 and 2 emissions, which are created by its own operations and purchases of energy.

GlobalData said this means many of the company’s projects currently on hold have a higher chance of going ahead than if it had planned to reduce those emissions in the coming years.

But the firm is planning to reduce its net scope 1 and 2 emissions from 2025 onwards and reach net zero by 2050.

“For the company to continue investing in low carbon and renewable technologies, the increase in oil production and continued investment in major oil developments sends a clear signal that these types of projects continue to showcase attractive economic returns that may help the company deliver its longer-term strategic transformation goals,” said Ward.

“It remains unlikely that the company can continue to develop large scale oil projects given its long term environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) commitments.”

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Continued reliance on coal-based steelmaking threatens global climate goals https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/features/coal-based-steelmaking-climate-goals/ https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/features/coal-based-steelmaking-climate-goals/#respond Tue, 29 Jun 2021 11:00:55 +0000 https://www.nsenergybusiness.com/?p=295342 The post Continued reliance on coal-based steelmaking threatens global climate goals appeared first on NS Energy.

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The world’s continued reliance on conventional, coal-based steelmaking is threatening the global climate goals, says a report.

The analysis by energy research group Global Energy Monitor (GEM) shows that despite company and country commitments being made to decarbonise the steel industry, continuing to rely heavily on coal is also risking billions in stranded assets.

Steel has been labelled as one of the “hard-to-abate” industries and, while it accounts for roughly 8% of global final energy demand, it is also currently responsible for about 7% of the CO2 emissions produced in the energy sector.

To meet the goals of the Paris Agreement, which aims to cap the rise in global temperatures by 2100 at “well below” 2C with 1.5C being the ideal scenario, those emissions need to reach net zero by between 2050 and 2070.

But GEM’s report, titled Pedal to the metal: No time to delay steel sector decarbonization, claims that current operating capacity and projected growth in the industry show no clear signals that the global steel sector will significantly reduce emissions under its present development plans.

“Climate pathways make it clear that we need to transition the current steel fleet from coal-intensive steelmaking to electrified steelmaking,” said Caitlin Swalec, researcher and analyst at GEM and lead author of the report. “The steel industry needs to put the pedal to the metal in terms of decarbonisation.”

 

Coal-based steelmaking capacity far exceeding production and presents risks to global climate goals

GEM’s report is based on the first comprehensive survey of all crude steel plants on the globe with a capacity of at least one million tonnes per annum.

According to the survey, more than 60% of global steelmaking capacity uses the blast furnace-basic oxygen furnace (BF-BOF) pathway, the most carbon-intensive method of producing steel with limited, difficult, and high-cost decarbonisation options.

More than three-quarters of global steel capacity under development is also set to use the coal-intensive BF-BOF pathway, rather than cleaner steel technologies such as electrified steelmaking.

These new carbon-intensive BF-BOF steel plants are being proposed and built despite steelmaking capacity being 25% above production levels in 2019.

Due to the excess capacity, and promising advancements in low-emissions steelmaking technologies, new BF-BOF plants risk up to $70bn in stranded asset risk for steel producers, according to GEM.

“Building new coal blast furnaces is a bad bet for steel producers and a bad bet for the planet,” said Christine Shearer, GEM’s coal programme director. “Coal-based steelmaking capacity already far exceeds production, there is no need to build more.”

 

Many older and polluting steel plants can be closed without disrupting global supply

The analysis claims the steel industry is now at a “risky tipping point” and warns that if countries and companies don’t begin moving away from BF-BOF production, the world will be on a trajectory that makes international climate targets “nearly impossible”.

Therefore, GEM believes greater efforts and investments need to be made to ensure cleaner, green steel technologies advance to widespread commercial use over the next few decades.

Over the next one to two decades, new low-emissions steelmaking technologies are projected to reach commercial scale, if pilot and demonstration projects prove successful.

At the same time, the report highlights that the majority of steel plants will face reinvestment cycles, creating difficult decisions about whether coal-based furnaces should be prolonged, retrofitted, or replaced with lower-emissions technology.

It added that these decisions must be carefully managed depending on how innovative technologies have advanced to avoid locking in emissions that “exceed international climate goals”.

The report found that with global steelmaking capacity about 25% higher than production, many older and polluting steel plants can be closed without disrupting global supply.

It said countries with the most overcapacity as a percentage of total production in 2020 were the EU27 and the UK with 26.6%, Japan 23.7%, US 20%, and China with between 13.5% and 20%.

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