Orsted
ESRS disclosure: ESRS E5 \ DR E5-2 \ Paragraph 20b
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- Provide a detailed account of the actions and resources employed by your organization concerning resource use and the circular economy, specifically addressing the increased utilization of secondary raw materials (recyclates). Indicate whether these actions and resources are in alignment with Disclosure Requirement E5-2, as outlined in the ESRS regulations.
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Question Id: E5-2_02
We engage with our key suppliers on decarbonisation matters as part of our supplier engagement and procurement strategy. In 2024, we have extended these engagements to also include resource use and circularity matters. These two topics naturally overlap as we are looking for opportunities to, for example, source more scrap steel as a means of increasing our usage of lower-emissions steel. As our negative impact occurs outside our own operations, we are dependent on continuous collaboration to make meaningful progress that will mitigate both the material negative impact as well as the risk related to our reliance on virgin scarce resources, when constructing our renewable energy assets. As an example of the supplier engagement programme development, we initiated a collaboration with wind turbine manufacturer Siemens Gamesa to use recycled glass fibres for certain new wind turbine blades at our Greater Changhua 2b and 4 offshore wind farms in Taiwan. The intended outcome of our supplier engagement and procurement strategy is to have a firm set of circularity-related supplier requirements in place within the next four to five years. For selected components, recycled materials have already been introduced as a sourcing evaluation criterion, ensuring our gradual transition away from the use of virgin resources.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 85%
- Provide a comprehensive description of your organization's material resource inflows, as mandated by Disclosure Requirement E5-4. This should encompass products, including packaging, materials with an emphasis on critical raw materials and rare earths, water, and property, plant, and equipment utilized within your operations and throughout your upstream value chain.
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Question Id: E5-4_01
We have identified key materials fundamental to the construction of our global portfolio of renewable energy projects across offshore and onshore wind, solar, and battery energy storage systems (BESS). Steel is a primary focus at this stage, given its significant role in renewable energy infrastructure and its high potential for recyclability. The use of scrap steel is a norm in steel production, with its content varying across geographies and reflecting established industry practices. Approximately 80% of the steel we source used in the production of steel plates for foundations comes from Europe, where supplier data indicates that, on average, 35% of the material used in these plates derive from scrap. While we account for geographic variability in our presentation, reflected in a range of 20 - 35%, our current estimates place us at the upper end. In addition to steel, critical raw materials, such as copper, aluminium, and rare earth elements (REEs), are essential for renewable energy technologies but present negative impacts and risks related to the depletion of virgin materials and the scarcity of supply. Improving the recyclability of materials such as plastics and glass fibres, including composites used in wind turbine blades, is a priority to reduce reliance on finite resources and ensure sustainable materials.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 80%