BHP’s first LNG-powered bulk carrier fuels up in Singapore

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BHP, the largest Australian mining company, has marked the delivery of the first of five bulk carriers that will be powered by liquefied gas instead of highly polluting bunker fuel to transport shipments of iron ore from the Pilbara to Asia.

As part of the mining giant’s efforts to slash emissions across its supply chain, BHP has chartered the world’s first fleet of Newcastlemax bulk carriers from Eastern Pacific Shipping, which will run on liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplied by Shell.

Rashpal Singh Bhatti, BHP commercial executive, supply chains, and Vandita Pant BHP chief commercial officer at Jurong Port Singapore in front of the Mount Tourmaline, the world’s first LNG-powered bulk carrier.

Rashpal Singh Bhatti, BHP commercial executive, supply chains, and Vandita Pant BHP chief commercial officer at Jurong Port Singapore in front of the Mount Tourmaline, the world’s first LNG-powered bulk carrier.Credit:Emma Connors

Introducing LNG-powered ships would eliminate NOx (nitrogen oxide) and SOx (sulphur oxide) emissions, and sharply reduce carbon dioxide emissions, according to BHP.

The first of the new ships, the MV Mt Tourmaline, arrived in Singapore on Monday to be filled with LNG. The 209,000-deadweight tonne vessel will then leave for Port Hedland in Western Australia to be loaded with iron ore.

BHP chief commercial officer Vandita Pant said the vessel would deliver significant improvements to energy efficiency and emissions intensity, and would reduce overall greenhouse gas emissions across the company’s value chain.

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“These LNG-fuelled vessels are expected to reduce greenhouse gas emissions intensity by more than 30 per cent on a per-voyage basis compared to a conventional fuelled voyage and will contribute towards our 2030 goal to support 40 per cent emissions intensity reduction of BHP-chartered shipping of our products,” Ms Pant said.

It comes as BHP and other global resources companies are increasingly targeting new ways to reform their businesses to reduce the vast carbon footprint caused by the mining, shipping and end-use of their products.

BHP has adopted some of the industry’s most stringent climate targets to date, vowing to cut its direct emissions by 30 per cent by the end of the decade and hit “net-zero” emissions by 2050. Last year it announced expanded targets requiring the shippers of its products and suppliers of goods and services to reach net-zero by 2050, as well as a “goal” for net-zero Scope 3 emissions” – the greenhouse gases released when customers burn or process the raw materials BHP sells.

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