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Home Renewable Energy Electric Vehicles

ARENA funds decarbonisation for mining vehicles

by Sarah MacNamara
December 5, 2024
in Electric Vehicles, News, Projects, Renewable Energy
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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An image of a mining truck on a mine site.

Image: BETO SANTILLAN/shutterstock.com.

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The Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) will provide Fortescue with a $10 million grant to develop, build, and demonstrate landmark fast chargers for heavy mine site vehicles. 

Fortescue’s $35.3 million ‘Fast Charger for Heavy Battery Electric Vehicles’ project aims to develop 6MW fast chargers, capable of charging 240t battery electric trucks in less than 30 minutes. 

ARENA CEO, Darren Miller, said the project would help reduce emissions in one of Australia’s most carbon intensive industries. 

“ARENA is working to reduce emissions from Australia’s heavy industry, with heavy haulage high on the priority list for the mining sector. 

“Heavy haulage for remote mine sites contributes around a quarter of the mining industry’s emission and is considered a hard to abate sector, so we’re investing in the technologies that will be part of the solution,” Mr Miller said. 

The funding has been awarded under the Federal Government’s Industrial Transformation Stream, part of the Powering the Regions Fund. The $400 million program aims to support emissions reduction at existing industrial facilities in regional Australia. 

The project is the next stage of fast charger development for Fortescue, building on an existing 3MW prototype. Once developed, the fast charger will be installed, demonstrated, and tested at Fortescue’s Hazelmere and Christmas Creek mine sites. 

“If the fast charger can be successfully validated at the operational Christmas Creek mine site, we’d like to see the technology widely deployed across Australia’s resources industry,” Mr Miller said. 

“These are the kinds of challenges ARENA is looking to address through the Industrial Transformation Stream.” 

The fast charger will be developed with global charging system standardisation in mind, ensuring compatibility with any equipment that meets the connector standard across mining, rail, and other heavy industry applications. 

Australian iron ore mining produces roughly 5Mt of CO2 each year due to fleet diesel consumption. Pathways to decarbonising mine operations are currently limited by a lack of commercially available solutions on the market. 

Fortescue Zero CEO, Ellie Coates, said the innovative chargers are designed to be a safe, rugged, high power and scalable fast charging solution for multiple different vehicle applications. 

“Leveraging our world-class capability in battery and charging solutions from motorsport, the fast chargers have been developed for the challenging conditions of the Pilbara. Equipped with robotic connection options, they will be able to power Fortescue’s future 240t battery electric trucks in just 30 minutes.” 

Preliminary testing is currently underway, with the project due to be completed in late 2025.  

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