Fortescue Ltd (ASX: FMG) has announced a suite of international partnerships with leading technology and manufacturing companies to fast-track industrial decarbonisation and deliver on its goal of achieving “Real Zero” emissions by 2030.
Unveiled during Climate Week NYC and the UN General Assembly, the alliances bring together expertise across continents: Australian and U.S. research, European engineering, and large-scale manufacturing capacity in China and the U.S. Fortescue Executive Chairman Dr. Andrew Forrest said the company is proving that profits can rise as emissions fall, while reinforcing that industry must lead the charge against climate change.
-
Global Partnerships: Fortescue signed agreements with BYD (energy storage and EVs), LONGi (solar technology), Envision Energy (wind turbines and storage), and XCMG (battery-electric mining trucks).
-
Fleet Electrification: Up to 400 zero-emission 240-tonne haul trucks will be supplied jointly by XCMG and Liebherr, with deliveries starting between 2028 and 2030. Liebherr will also provide electric excavators.
-
Wind Expansion: Fortescue has acquired 100% of Spanish renewables innovator Nabrawind, whose self-lifting turbine towers enable higher installations to capture stronger winds. Envision Energy will supply advanced turbines for Fortescue’s first Pilbara wind project.
-
R&D Network: The initiatives build on Fortescue’s existing innovation ecosystem, including Fortescue Zero hubs in the U.S., U.K., and Australia, and collaborations with CSIRO.
The push comes amid growing scrutiny of corporate emissions, with new research published in Nature linking individual companies to rising heatwave risks worldwide. Heavy industry faces escalating legal, regulatory, and financial exposure from climate change, intensifying pressure to act.
Fortescue is positioning itself as a leader in industrial decarbonisation, building an integrated green energy supply chain to outcompete fossil fuels on cost. The company is also leveraging China’s scale in green manufacturing alongside European and American innovation to drive down costs and accelerate deployment.
Dr. Forrest underscored that the initiative is a “truly multilateral collaboration” that mirrors the international cooperation once fostered by open trade, uniting global expertise to deliver the lowest-cost renewable energy systems.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
More Top Reads From Oilprice.com