Top steel producer commits to zero emissions by 2050

30th September 2020 By: Mariaan Webb - Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor Online

Top steel producer commits to zero emissions by 2050

ArcelorMittal on Wednesday announced a group-wide commitment to carbon neutrality by 2050, building on the commitment made in 2019 for its European business to reduce emissions by 30% by 2030, and be carbon neutral by 2050.

“As the world’s leading steel company, we believe we have a responsibility to lead the efforts to decarbonise the steelmaking process, which today has a significant carbon footprint,” said president and CFO Aditya Mittal

The Luxembourg-headquartered group is considering various pilot technologies, including hydrogen, which Mittal said had excellent potential. 

In Hamburg, where ArccelorMittal owns and operates Europe’s only direct reduced iron-electric arc furnace (DRI-EAF)  facility, the group would test not only the ability of hydrogen to reduce the iron-ore and form DRI, but also test that carbon-free DRI in the EAF in the actual steelmaking process.

The demonstration plant for the hydrogen-DRI route would start up in 2023.

“Hydrogen has a lot of potential but given the significant transition cost, we also believe in working on solutions for the traditional integrated route,” Mittal stated, adding that it would also consider a bio-energy, carbon capture and utilisation and storage (CCUS) route.

The so-called smart carbon route is centred on modifying the blast furnace route to create carbon neutral steelmaking through the use of circular carbon - in the form of sustainable biomass or carbon containing waste streams - and CCUS.

ArcelorMittal is said to be well advanced on constructing several commercial-scale projects to test and prove a range of smart carbon technologies. The start-up target for key projects is targeted in 2022.

The steel group said that, while both routes had the potential to deliver carbon-neutral steel by 2050, it believed that smart carbon could deliver results sooner, and could make a meaningful contribution to carbon dioxide emissions reduction this decade, while industrial scale production from the hydrogen-DRI route was unlikely to be significant before 2030, owing to the current high costs.