Info

Representatives of LKAB, SSAB and Vattenfall discuss fossil-free iron pellets at the HYBRIT Pilot Plant in Arctic Sweden

Susanne Rostmark (Left), Research Director at LKAB, Martin Pei (centre), CTO of SSAB, and Mikael Nordlander (right), Decarbonisatino Director at Vattenfall, discuss fossil-free iron pellets at the HYBRIT Pilot Plant in Arctic Sweden, the site that produced the world's first batch of fossil-free sponge iron. 

The plan is a joint Swedish investment by steel-maker SSAB, iron ore miner LKAB and electricity provider Vattenfall. 

With HYBRIT technology, SSAB aims to be the first steel company in the world to bring fossil-free steel to the market already in 2026 and largely eliminate carbon dioxide emissions from their own operations in around 2030.

In 2016, SSAB, LKAB (Europe’s largest iron ore producer) and Vattenfall (one of Europe’s largest energy companies) joined forces to create HYBRIT – an initiative that endeavors to revolutionize steelmaking. Using HYBRIT technology, SSAB aims to replace coking coal, traditionally needed for ore-based steelmaking, with fossil-free electricity and hydrogen. The result will be the world’s first fossil-free steelmaking technology, with virtually no carbon footprint. Their goal is to reduce Sweden’s CO2 emissions by 10% and Finland’s by 7%.

Add to Cart Add to Lightbox Download
Filename
Green_Steel_Justin_Jin_034_JIN09184.jpg
Copyright
Justin Jin / JJ Productions
Image Size
7584x5059 / 23.3MB
Arctic EU European Klimawandel L'hydrogène Nachhaltigkeit Norrsken Northern light Skandinavien Sverige Umwelt Wasserstoff ambientale ambiente aurora borealis blast brint bæredygtighed bæredygtigt bærekraft bærekraftig cambiamento climatico cambio climático carbon-free cell colour commodity de-carbonisation de-carbonization decarbonisation documentary drone durable duurzaam duurzaamheid el emission energi energia energie energija energy energía erneuerbare europe experiment explosive explosives fornybar fossil-free fossilfritt fuel fuel cell förnybar green green steel groningen gruvarbetare grönt stål gустойчивост h2 hands hernieuwbaar hidrógeno hole hybrit hydrogen idrogeno iron jin justin justin jin järn klimaatverandering klimaendringer klimatske promjene klimaændringer l'environnement la durabilité le changement climatique les énergies renouvelables lkab malm martin martin pei medio ambiente mikael milieu miljö miljø mine miner mining moving nachhaltig net zero nordlander obnovitelné zdroje obnovljivi izvori održivo održivost okoliš ore orebody overview panorama pei pellet pellets polar power r&d relocating relocation renewable renewables renovables reportage research resource resources rinnovabili rock rocks rostmark safety scandinavia scandinavian sinkhole skandinavisk sostenibile sostenibilidad sostenibilità sostenible sponge ssab steel stål susanne sustainable svamp svensk svenska swede sweden swedish technology test udržitelnost underground value chain value-chain vattenfall vedvarende vodik vodík väte water water fuel waterstof worker zero zero emission zero-emission změna klimatu životní prostředí водород възобновяеми източници енергия изменение на климата околна среда устойчи�
Contained in galleries
Green Steel, Hydrogen - All
Susanne Rostmark (Left), Research Director at LKAB, Martin Pei (centre), CTO of SSAB, and Mikael Nordlander (right), Decarbonisatino Director at Vattenfall, discuss fossil-free iron pellets at the HYBRIT Pilot Plant in Arctic Sweden, the site that produced the world's first batch of fossil-free sponge iron. 

The plan is a joint Swedish investment by steel-maker SSAB, iron ore miner LKAB and electricity provider Vattenfall. 

With HYBRIT technology, SSAB aims to be the first steel company in the world to bring fossil-free steel to the market already in 2026 and largely eliminate carbon dioxide emissions from their own operations in around 2030.

In 2016, SSAB, LKAB (Europe’s largest iron ore producer) and Vattenfall (one of Europe’s largest energy companies) joined forces to create HYBRIT – an initiative that endeavors to revolutionize steelmaking. Using HYBRIT technology, SSAB aims to replace coking coal, traditionally needed for ore-based steelmaking, with fossil-free electricity and hydrogen. The result will be the world’s first fossil-free steelmaking technology, with virtually no carbon footprint. Their goal is to reduce Sweden’s CO2 emissions by 10% and Finland’s by 7%.