BHP Cuts Green Push in Iron Ore Segment, Media Report Says
(Bloomberg) -- BHP Group is pulling back on key decarbonization projects in its Western Australian iron ore operations, slowing a climate strategy the miner had once positioned as central to its long-term growth plans, according to leaked internal documents cited by the Guardian and ABC’s Four Corners.
The documents show the world’s biggest miner shelved a board-approved solar and battery project at its Jimblebar iron ore mine and deferred a 500 megawatt solar, wind and battery system. BHP also abandoned plans for a lower-emissions iron ore processing facility, that had the potential to prevent 1.7 million tons of emissions a year, according to the report.
Companies across sectors from banking to airlines and energy producers have taken recent steps to dilute commitments to emissions reduction amid rising costs, a lack of available technologies or political pressure. Rio Tinto Group, BHP’s largest competitor, in December lowered its estimated spending through 2030 on decarbonization to $1 billion to $2 billion, from a previous estimate of as much as $6 billion.
As of mid-2025, BHP reduced emissions by 36% from the firm’s 2020 baseline, with progress driven by shifting 70% of the company’s total electricity use to renewable sources, a spokesperson said. However, many of the technologies the resources industry will need to achieve net zero — notably in heavy earth moving and bulk logistics equipment — “are not yet ready to be deployed,” the spokesperson said.
BHP is running trials with its partners of battery-electric haul trucks and locomotives to “support the acceleration of this technology,” the spokesperson said.
The rollback is likely to intensify scrutiny from investors and environmental groups, who argue that the company’s spending decisions could influence the pace of the nation’s decarbonization ambitions.
(Updated with BHP response in fourth and fifth paragraphs)
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