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Vattenfall CEO says green premium 'often exaggerated'

  • : Emissions, Hydrogen, Metals
  • 24/01/16

The green premium of low carbon technologies is often exaggerated and needs to be put into context, Swedish utility Vattenfall's chief executive Anna Borg told the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos today.

Borg said that for a person buying a car made with what she dubbed "fossil-free steel" the green premium equals to the cost of two extra USB sockets.

"So, it''s do-able," she said.

The premium for 'green steel' is estimated to be 25pc above conventional steel, but "once the price of carbon emissions will increase the relative difference will disappears," she told WEF delegates during a session on the First Movers Coalition (FMC)., a group of large private-sector companies aiming to decarbonise hard-to-abate industries such as steel, aluminium, and transport of which Vattenfall is a member.

Within the FMC, Vattenfall has made commitments in the steel, cement, aviation and trucking sector. The firm, through its Hybrit joint venture with Swedish steelmaker SSAB and Swedish mining company LKAB, delivered steel made using hydrogen instead of coking coal to Volvo for the first time in 2021.

But US aluminium packaging firm Ball's chief executive Daniel Fisher warned that if the regulatory environments change then green premiums can become more significant and risky.

"We have to continue down the path to sustain what we have all laid out and what government have laid out, and then [the green premium] is not a premium," he said.

Borg said demand for green steel was "clearly there" and government should not pour subsidies into green technologies, but act to de-risk the scaling up of these technologies.

"The capital is there," she said.

Continuity of governments is very important to bring "that consistency in term of making sure that trust is being built", Singapore minister for manpower Tan See Leng said. Governments can perform the role of catalyst and enabler for many of green initiatives, he said, talking about Singapore's carbon tax.

"It is a bold step, but we have committed to making sure that what we collect from the carbon tax goes into the development of renewable energies," he said.

Under Singapore's Carbon Pricing Act of 2019, any industrial facility that emits direct greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions equal to or above 25,000 t/yr of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) is required to register and pay a carbon tax of $5/t CO2e. The carbon tax rate increases to $25/t CO2e in 2024 and $45/t CO2e in 2026.

Tan said Singapore will announce later this month a shortlist of consortiums looking to work on proposals for the use of ammonia as a low carbon fuel.

"This will move Singapore closer to be one of the first country in the world to test and deploy a direct ammonia power plant and to support the holistic assessment of ammonia for shipping," he said.


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