Our climate is changing - and we are all to blame. Global demand for fresh food and water, clothes, electronics, medicines, cars, planes and construction materials all ensures the continual burning of fossil fuels.
It's easy to say ban them; it's harder to achieve.
“We cannot just turn off the tap,” says Dr Peter Williams, INEOS’ Group Technical Director. “Many of our products, which are made with gas and oil, are being used to build wind turbines, solar panels and other renewable technologies.”
That doesn’t mean INEOS is blind to the problems of global warming which threaten the planet. Far from it.
It understands what’s at stake. “As a business, INEOS is driven by innovation and the need to find alternative raw materials and fuel,” said Dr Greet Van Eetvelde, INEOS' Group head of Energy and Innovation Policy and lead of CEN, INEOS' Carbon and Energy Network. “And staff are not doing it because they have to. They are doing it because they want to.”
At INEOS’ Zwijndrecht site – the birthplace of INEOS - staff have, for years, been cutting greenhouse gas emissions by capturing carbon dioxide to be reused in other on-site processes. That work goes on.
But INEOS is also: WORKING with pioneering recycling companies so it can use fewer resources – gas and oil – to make its products.
STARTING to replace gas and oil, where it can, with renewable raw materials and REINVESTING its profits in state-of-the-art manufacturing plants to improve their efficiency – and cut greenhouse gas emissions. On that score, it is proud of its record.
“Optimising our sites to make them more efficient is something we are really good at,” said Greet.
But INEOS is not just focusing on what it has done. What matters is what it intends to do now and in the future.
It has set itself clear targets to use more recycled plastics to make its products by 2025.
And it’s making good progress already with many new products now on sale.
“All this is moving us to a circular economy which will increase resource efficiency, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and provide an outlet for plastic waste,” said Peter.
As it looks to the future, it believes hydrogen will be the answer to many people’s prayers for cleaner air and its businesses in the UK, Germany and Belgium are all now involved in projects.
Cutting Usage
At INEOS’ Zwijndrecht site – the birthplace of INEOS - staff have, for years, been capturing carbon dioxide to be reused in other on-site processes.
Investment
It is reinvesting its profits in state-of-the-art manufacturing plants to improve their efficiency – and, as a result, cut greenhouse gas emissions.
More Renewables
INEOS has started replacing gas and oil, where it can, with renewable raw materials to make its products.
New Technologies
INEOS is working in partnership with pioneering recycling companies so it can use fewer resources to make its products.
Target-driven
INEOS has set itself clear targets to use more recycled plastics to make its products by 2025. And it’s making good progress already with many new products now on sale.
Alternative Energy
INEOS’ businesses in the UK, Germany and Belgium are all now involved in projects to smooth the road to an economy fuelled by hydrogen which produces zero emissions.