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Fortescue increases spending on green energy and maintains shipment forecast

Fortescue, an Australian mining company, announced on Friday that it would continue to invest in green energy as a way to 'insulate itself from the volatility of global oil markets. Its full-year shipment forecast remained unchanged.

Iron ore is the fourth largest producer in the world. Its plan to reduce fossil fuels faster than its competitors will give it an advantage as global miners face inflationary pressures due to wars in the Middle East.

Dino Otranto, Fortescue Metals & Operations Chief Executive Officer said: "We are already reaping the benefits of decarbonising our operations."

"We are fundamentally changing how we run our business by reducing our dependence on fossil fuels at a time when energy supplies are becoming increasingly uncertain."

Fortescue announced that it will invest $680 million in the development of new green energy infrastructure for Pilbara. This is a continuation of a previous commitment to accelerate the roll-out of a green energy off-grid system to eliminate fossil fuels.

Fortescue shipped 48.4 metric tons of iron ore during the three-month period ending on March 31. This was just a little bit less than Visible Alpha's consensus estimate of 48.6 metric tons, but still higher than the reported 46.1 metric tons a year ago.

The Perth-based miner maintained its fiscal 2026 forecast at 195 to 205 millions tons but reduced Iron Bridge shipment guidance to 9 to 10 million tonnes on a 100 percent basis. This is compared to the earlier estimate of between 10 and 12 million tons.

The shipment of iron bridge project by Fortescue in Western Australia increased 33.3% in the third quarter to 2,000,000 tons. However, production and shipments decreased due to weather disruptions caused by Tropical Cyclones Mitchell & Narelle.

The miner also noted a?rise in costs. Hematite operations exported 46.4 million tons compared to 44.6 million last year. C1 unit costs increased by more than 4%, to $18.29 for wet metric tons.

Fortescue warned that a $10 per barrel change in Brent crude oil can affect its hematite ore C1 unit costs by $0.20 per wet-metric ton if all other factors are constant. (Reporting from Sneha Sunny and Sherin Kumar in Bengaluru. Additional reporting by Melanie Burton. Editing by Vijay Kishore and Maju Samuel.

(source: Reuters)