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BP Scraps Target of Reducing Oil Production by 2030

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10 Oct, 2024

This post was originally published on Eco Watch

Oil major BP has scrapped its goal of reducing oil and gas production by the end of the decade, angering environmental groups who say the company is prioritizing profits over the planet.

According to three sources who have knowledge on the matter, BP CEO Murray Auchincloss scaled back the company’s energy transition plans in order to regain investor confidence, reported Reuters.

“As Murray said at the start of the year in our fourth-quarter results, the direction is the same but we are going to deliver as a simpler, more focused and higher-value company,” a spokesperson for BP said, as The Times reported.

In 2020, BP unveiled an ambitious strategy to reduce its production by 40 percent, while quickly ramping up renewables by 2030, reported Reuters. In February of 2023, the London-based company pared back the reduction goal to 25 percent, as investors concentrated on near-term profits instead of the energy transition.

In 2022, the oil giant recorded record profits of $28 billion, The Guardian reported.

“It’s clear that Auchincloss is hell-bent on prioritising company profits and shareholder wealth above all else as extreme floods and wildfires rack up billions of dollars in damages, destroying homes and lives all over the world,” said Philip Evans, senior climate campaigner of Greenpeace UK, as reported by The Guardian.

Agathe Masson, Reclaim Finance’s stewardship campaigner, said BP was prioritizing its own output over taking action to help fight the climate crisis.

“BP might be happy to see the planet burn in the name of profits, but investors must take a longer view and reject this climate-wrecking strategy,” Masson said.

Last year, the oil company invested $2.5 billion in renewables, hydrogen, biofuels and EV charging. It has six gigawatts of UK offshore wind investments, as well as government backing for a $5.2 billion carbon capture project.

In June, BP froze all its new offshore wind projects in the face of investors who were dissatisfied with its green energy targets.

BP is currently looking at new investments in the Gulf of Mexico and the Middle East to ramp up its output of oil and gas, according to the sources, as Reuters reported.

Auchincloss became CEO at the start of the year, but has not been able to stop the falling shareholder price of the company, leading investors to question BP’s ability to turn a profit under its current strategy.

The company has kept its goal of net zero by 2050.

While Auchincloss will not present the updated plan to investors until February, the sources said BP has already abandoned the 2030 production goal in practice.

“Most oil and gas majors have consistently failed to invest enough into transition technologies, setting targets and making claims that have often been abandoned or debunked,” said James Alexander, UK Sustainable Investment and Finance Association’s chief executive, as reported by The Guardian. “The transition will not wait for them. The gap they have left is already being filled by renewables companies.”

The post BP Scraps Target of Reducing Oil Production by 2030 appeared first on EcoWatch.

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ABB receives EPD status for gearless mill drive ring motor

ABB receives EPD status for gearless mill drive ring motor

ABB has gained Environmental Product Declaration (EPD) status for its Gearless Mill Drive (GMD) ring motor — technology used to drive large grinding mills in the mining industry.

An EPD is a standardised document that provides detailed information about the environmental impact of a product throughout its life cycle. Based on a comprehensive Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) study, the EPD highlights ABB’s commitment to transparency, environmental responsibility and supporting customers in making informed decisions on sustainability in their supply chains.

ABB analysed the environmental impact of a ring motor across its entire life cycle from supply chain and production to usage and end-of-life disposal. The study was conducted for a ring motor of a semi-autogenous grinding (SAG) mill with an installed power of 24 MW and was based on a reference service life of 25 years.

“Sustainability is at the core of our purpose at ABB, influencing how we operate and innovate for customers,” said Andrea Quinta, Sustainability Specialist at ABB. “By earning the Environmental Product Declaration for our ring motor, we emphasise our environmental stewardship and industry leadership for this technology. We adhered to the highest standards throughout this process, as we do in the ABB Ring Motor factory every day. This recognition highlights to the mining industry what they are bringing into their own operations when they work with ABB.”

The comprehensive LCA was conducted at ABB’s factory in Bilbao, Spain, and was externally verified and published in accordance with international standards ISO 14025 and ISO 14040/14044. It will remain valid for five years.

The ring motor, a key component of the GMD, is a drive system without any gears where the transmission of the torque between the motor and the mill is done through the magnetic field in the air gap between the motor stator and the motor rotor. It optimises grinding applications in the minerals and mining industries by enabling variable-speed operation, leading to energy and cost savings.

The full EPD for the ABB GMD Ring Motor can be viewed on EPD International.

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