Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Tuesday, October 05 2021 - 18:00
AsiaNet
ICMM makes landmark climate commitment to net zero by 2050 or sooner
LONDON, Oct. 5, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

Today, members of the International Council on Mining and Metals (ICMM) have 
committed to a goal of net zero scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 
2050 or sooner, in line with the ambitions of the Paris Agreement. This 
landmark commitment was made in an open letter signed by the CEOs of ICMM's 
company members.

Rohitesh Dhawan, CEO, ICMM, said: "As the suppliers of the minerals and metals 
that are critical to decarbonisation and sustainable development, we have a 
particular responsibility to minimise the impact of our operations on the 
environment. ICMM members' collective commitment to net zero scope 1 and 2 GHG 
emissions by 2050 is a pivotal moment in our history. We are speaking with one 
voice, representing approximately one third of the global mining and metals 
industry – including more than 650 sites in over 50 countries – so that we 
drive emissions reduction at a significant scale.
  
"ICMM members have and will continue to set meaningful short and/or medium-term 
targets to build clear pathways to achieving this goal, while also accelerating 
action on addressing scope 3 emissions and enhancing disclosure. We encourage 
other mining and metals companies, suppliers and customers to join us in 
decarbonising commodity value chains so that we collectively accelerate climate 
action in our wider industry." 

Gonzalo Munoz, UNFCCC High Level Climate Action Champion, said: "I welcome the 
leadership and joint ambition of ICMM members to commit to a goal of net-zero 
scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions by 2050 or sooner, and I strongly encourage 
companies to set scope 3 GHG emissions reduction targets by the end of 2023. 
The High-Level Climate Action Champions encourage members to strive to set the 
most ambitious science-based targets possible in line with the criteria of the 
Race to Zero campaign." 

Although we have individual decarbonisation targets which in some cases go 
beyond ICMM's collective commitment, this represents a joint ambition. The rate 
and nature of the ultimate decline in emissions will vary across the different 
commodities and geographies represented by our diverse membership. Yet our 
approach to individually setting and meeting targets will be consistent and 
include the following, no later than the end of 2023 where these do not already 
exist: 

- Setting Scope 1 and 2 targets: we will build clear pathways to achieving net 
zero Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions by 2050 or sooner, through meaningful short 
and/or medium-term targets.  

- Accelerating action on Scope 3 GHG emissions: we recognise that Scope 3 is 
critical to minimising our overall impact and we will set Scope 3 targets, if 
not by the end of 2023, as soon as possible. Although all Scope 3 action 
depends on the combined efforts of producers, suppliers and customers, some 
commodities face greater technological and collaborative barriers than others. 
We will play a leading role in overcoming these barriers and advancing 
partnerships that enable credible target setting and emission reductions across 
value chains. 
- Covering all material sources: our targets will cover all material sources of 
emissions, aligning to the GHG Protocol definition of organisational boundaries 
and materiality. 
- Focussing on absolute reductions: for some operations, intensity rather than 
absolute targets may be more appropriate in the short and medium term. Where 
intensity targets are used, we will disclose the corresponding absolute 
increase or decrease in GHG emissions. 

- Applying robust methodologies: we will use target-setting methodologies that 
are aligned with the ambitions of the Paris Agreement and disclose in detail 
the assumptions we use. 

- Disclosing openly and transparently: we will report our progress on Scopes 1, 
2 and 3 annually, obtain external verification over our performance, and report 
in alignment with the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related 
Financial Disclosures.  
 
These commitments are additional to and have been incorporated into an update 
of ICMM's Climate Change Position Statement which had several pre-existing 
commitments on performance and disclosure. Action on climate change is an 
integral part of ICMM's Mining Principles [ 
https://www.icmm.com/en-gb/about-us/member-requirements/mining-principles ], 
representing the comprehensive commitment to a responsible mining and metals 
industry. 

Notes to editors

This release has been translated from English by a third party. ICMM is not 
liable for any inaccuracies in this translation.

English, Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese, Russian, French and Chinese versions of 
the open letter and ICMM's Climate Change Position Statement will be available 
on our website:

- The open letter is available here: [ 
https://www.icmm.com/en-gb/environmental-stewardship/climate-change/net-zero-commitment 
]. 
- ICMM's updated Climate Change Position Statement is available here: [ 
https://www.icmm.com/en-gb/about-us/member-requirements/position-statements/climate-change 
].

ICMM's CEO Rohitesh Dhawan will moderate a session at Reuters IMPACT with Jakob 
Stausholm, CEO of Rio Tinto, Hilde Aasheim, President & CEO of Hydro, Gonzalo 
Muñoz, UNFCCC High Level Climate Action Champion and Manuel Pulgar-Vidal, 
Global Leader of Climate & Energy at WWF on 5 October at 16.30 BST to discuss 
how the mining and metals industry is making progress towards the goals of the 
Paris Agreement and how we can go further.

Supporting assets are available to download from ICMM's media briefing pack [ 
https://www.dropbox.com/sh/xwllrv9rpmqxhw1/AABbXsOfMKmBBc3dZpauxI4ca?dl=0 ] 
(including quotes from several ICMM member CEOs and high res images from some 
of our company members that are available for publication with the piece – 
please credit the source company).

About ICMM  

ICMM is an international organisation dedicated to a safe, fair and sustainable 
mining and metals industry. Bringing together 28 mining and metals 
companies ( https://www.icmm.com/en-gb/members/member-companies ) and over 35 
regional and commodities associations [ 
https://www.icmm.com/en-gb/members/member-associations ], it strengthens 
environmental and social performance and serves as a catalyst for change, 
enhancing mining's contribution to society. Every ICMM company member adheres 
to its  Mining Principles [ https://www.icmm.com/mining-principles ] 
which incorporates comprehensive environmental, social and governance 
requirements, robust site-level validation of Performance Expectations and 
credible assurance of corporate sustainability reports.
 
ICMM's 28 company members are: African Rainbow Minerals, Alcoa, Anglo American, 
AngloGold Ashanti, Antofagasta Minerals, Barrick, BHP, Boliden, Codelco, 
Freeport-McMoRan, Glencore, Gold Fields, Hydro, JX Nippon Mining & Metals, 
Minera San Cristobal, Minsur, Mitsubishi Materials, MMG, Newcrest, Newmont, 
Orano, Polyus, Rio Tinto, Sibanye Stillwater, South32, Sumitomo Metal Mining, 
Teck and Vale.

SOURCE: International Council on Mining and Metals (ICMM)
Translations

Japanese