Muscat Daily

Saudi Aramco sets 2050 zero carbon emissions target

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Riyadh, Saudi Arabia - Energy giant Saudi Aramco committed to being a net zero enterprise by 2050, its chief Amin Nasser said on Saturday, shortly after the kingdom said it aimed to achieve zero carbon emissions by 2060.

Saudi Arabia, the world’s top crude exporter, said it would also join a global effort to cut methane emissions by 30 per cent by 2030.

“Saudi Aramco will achieve an ambition of being also a net zero from our operation by 2050,” Nasser told the Saudi Green Initiative forum.

“We understand that the road will be complex, the transition will have its challenges, but we are confident we can meet them and accelerate our efforts to a low emission future.”

Earlier, in recorded remarks, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman told the forum that the kingdom’s target was to reach net zero emissions by 2060.

As the global COP26 global climate summit approaches, a string of countries have pledged to aim for net zero emissions by 2050, and global airlines and banks are also targeting the midcentury goal.

UN chief Antonio Guterres said on Friday the current climate situation was ‘a one-way ticket for disaster’, stressing the need to ‘avoid a failure’ at COP26 in Glasgow.

Held between October 31 and November 12, the gathering is seen as a crucial step in setting worldwide emissions targets to slow global warming.

Saudi Arabia is estimated to emit about 600mn tonnes of carbon dioxide per year - more than France and slightly less than Germany.

The initiative­s come as Saudi Aramco faces scrutiny from investors over its emissions.

In January, Bloomberg News reported that Aramco excluded emissions generated from many of its refineries and petrochemi­cal plants in its overall carbon disclosure­s to investors.

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Amin Nasser

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