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AGIG takes ESG strides

Galilee Glenaras, comet ridge, gas

Australian Gas Infrastructure Group (AGIG) has released its 2024 environmental, social and governance (ESG) report.

AGIG reported achieving an 18 per cent Scope 1 and 2 emissions reduction from its operations since 2020. This is in line with the company’s interim target of reducing emissions by 30 per cent by 2030. AGIG also completed a project to identify Scope 3 emissions categories that are most material to AGIG, with a view to begin reporting in 2025.

“We also remain focused on delivering renewable gas to our customers,” AGIG CEO Craig de Laine said.

“Utilising our extensive and reliable infrastructure to deliver renewable gas to customers, as we do natural gas today, is the right way to develop this new industry for Australia.

“In 2024, we increased renewable hydrogen blending at our demonstration plant HyP South Australia to up to 10 per cent and we commissioned a second demonstration plant, HyP Gladstone which delivers an up to 10 per cent blend to the whole of the Gladstone gas network.

“We also broke ground at HyP Murray Valley, which will be one of the largest renewable hydrogen facilities in Australia once completed in 2025.”

Last year, the company also made significant progress against its long-term targets, which includes completing a gender pay gap analysis, developing a diversity and inclusion policy and plan, and collecting waste data from across the business to enable future tracking and reporting in this area.

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