The world’s biggest miner is trying to figure out if
tiny rock-eating microbes can help it solve a notoriously difficult climate
puzzle — how to cut emissions from steelmaking.
Most steel today is made in blast furnaces powered by
coal, the dirtiest fossil fuel, but there’s a way to refine the metal using
less polluting natural gas or hydrogen in a process called the “direct reduced
iron” (DRI) method, that reduces iron ore to iron without melting it.
The problem is that the greener process only works on
high-quality iron ore, and most of BHP Group Ltd.’s iron ore comes from the
Pilbara region in Western Australia, where the raw material contains too much
phosphorus, alumina and other impurities to be refined using anything but coal.
That’s why BHP has enlisted the help of Boston-based
Allonnia, a biotech startup backed by, among others, Bill Gates.
Allonnia discovered that BHP’s iron ore contained
phosphorus-consuming organisms that could kickstart the refining process
naturally, said Paul Perry, vice president of innovation at BHP. “All living
things eat phosphorus,” he said, but this particular microbe also shakes loose
alumina from the ore.
If these critters’ services could somehow be
harnessed and scaled up, they could be let loose on giant mounds of iron ore,
where they would proceed to eat the unwanted gunk — known as “gangue” — and
create a product good enough for most of the hydrogen-powered steel mills being
developed. Most hydrogen is produced using fossil fuels today, but if it’s
manufactured using 100% clean energy, then the steelmaking process could
eventually be entirely carbon-free.
Reducing the phosphorus and alumina content could
bump up the purity of the iron ore from 62% to at least 65%, bringing it much
closer to the grade needed for less carbon-intensive DRI refining processes,
according to Perry. Still, he stressed that it’s “way too early” to celebrate,
saying the move from laboratory testing to large-scale operations would be a
major leap.
Allonnia has other specially crafted microbes in
trials to clean up dangerous chemicals that can linger forever in wastewater
and soil. The startup’s chief commercial officer Chuck Price said it plans to
start a small-scale trial of the new technology with BHP in 2024. “Depending on
its success and the lessons we learn, we aim for development of a full-scale
plant from there,” he said.
BHP isn’t the only miner exploring ways to reduce
emissions generated from making steel. Rio Tinto is exploring the use of
biomass and microwave energy to create a less carbon-intensive process capable
of handling lower-grade ore. Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. is working with
Japan’s Mitsubishi Corp. and European steelmaker Voestalpine AG on a
hydrogen-based pilot plant in Austria, where it will test refining different
grades of ore. Both Rio and BHP are also experimenting with a three-step
process that uses an “electric smelting furnace” to improve the quality of iron
that comes out of a DRI plant.
Steel is needed to make everything from bridges to
electric vehicles. Producing it is responsible for an estimated 8% of global
greenhouse gas emissions a year, and finding ways to cut those emissions is
crucial if the world is to avoid catastrophic global warming. BHP aspires to
reduce its Scope 3 emissions — that is, the emissions of customers when they
use its products — to net zero by 2050. It’s a huge task, given its current
Scope 3 emissions are equivalent to an eyewatering 365 million tons of CO2 a
year, or almost as much as the entire UK emits in a year. Reaching net zero
would require most of the steel made by its customers to be green by that date.
Developing greener production methods is especially
important for Australian miners like BHP, whose lower-grade iron ore risks
becoming obsolete in a world dominated by green steelmaking techniques. They
“need to either find a way to improve the quality of that Pilbara ore or look
at technologies that allow the use of lower grade iron ore,” said Simon
Nicholas, a Sydney-based steel sector analyst at the Institute of Energy
Economics and Financial Analysis. DRI is by far the most advanced green steel
technology, he said, but it relies on a grade of iron ore that makes up less
than 5% of today’s global supply of the steelmaking material.
Still, which green steel method could dominate
remains an open question. Miners and steelmakers have to choose their
technology pathways based on the resources at hand, and most of these
innovations may not be mature until the 2030s. Last month, Tata Steel Ltd. said
it won’t be able to reach its 2030 emissions intensity reduction targets unless
development of new technologies accelerates.
“There are so many unknowns,” said Simon Farry, Rio
Tinto’s head of steel decarbonization. “This is an absolute revolution for the
industry, but it’s not going to happen at the speed of a revolution. It’s going
to be an evolution over two to four decades.”
Mining.com