Ørsted Joins SteelZero Initiative

Ørsted Joins SteelZero Initiative

Environment

Ørsted has joined the SteelZero initiative to drive the market demand for net-zero emissions steel.

Ørsted/Illustration

SteelZero is a new global initiative from the non-profit Climate Group, run in partnership with ResponsibleSteel. Organisations that join SteelZero commit to a transition to procuring, specifying, or stocking 100 per cent net-zero steel by 2050. The commitment framework also includes an interim commitment for 2030, with various options to achieve this.

On track to be carbon-neutral in 2025, Ørsted targets a net-zero carbon footprint and carbon-neutral supply chain in 2040.

Steel accounts for about half of the emissions in Ørsted’s offshore wind supply chain. The steel used in the company’s wind turbine installations is highly specialised, and no commercially viable low-carbon alternatives are available today.

“As one of the world’s largest renewable energy companies, we’ve set the ambition to decarbonise our entire supply chain by 2040,” said Jakob Askou Bøss, Senior Vice President, Corporate Strategy and Stakeholder Relations, at Ørsted.

“Without low-carbon steel, that won’t be possible. With SteelZero, we want to make it clear to the steel industry that we’re ready to be part of the journey of innovation and collaboration to get there.”

Back in January, Ørsted launched a programme to reduce emissions in the most carbon-intensive categories of the company’s supply chain: manufacture of wind turbines, foundations, substations, cables, and components.

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These are produced using materials that are energy-intensive to extract and manufacture. Ørsted’s strategic suppliers are asked to disclose their own emissions, set science-based carbon reduction targets, and use 100 % renewable electricity in manufacturing, among other key requirements.

There are substantial technical challenges to achieving a carbon-neutral supply chain, including around steel. Ørsted said. Significant innovation is needed to find sustainable and cost-competitive ways to produce low-carbon steel, entailing close engagement with suppliers. The SteelZero initiative will support such engagement by fostering low-carbon innovation and collaboration across the steel value chain.

“The good news is that our strategic suppliers share our ambitions,” Askou Bøss said.

“So far, we’ve had a lot of positive feedback, and our suppliers are fully engaged. The message we’ve heard loud and clear is that we must solve this together.”

The steel industry contributes about seven per cent of global carbon emissions.

“Steel is a critical material for the renewable energy sector, but its production accounts for a significant amount of companies’ supply chain emissions,” Jenny Chu, Head of Energy Productivity Initiatives at the Climate Group, said.

”That’s why it’s so encouraging to have Ørsted, one of the largest renewable energy companies in the world, sign up as a founding member of SteelZero. Ørsted’s bold commitment to procuring 100% net-zero steel by 2040 not only demonstrates real leadership and ambition, but will also inspire Ørsted’s peers and others across the supply chain to follow suit.”