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LEANCenter-Left
WORDS801
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TUE · 2026-05-26 · 00:48 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0526-79161
News/Chris Bowen says he has made it ‘crystal clear’ to BHP and o…
NSR-2026-0526-79161News Report·EN·Environmental

Chris Bowen says he has made it ‘crystal clear’ to BHP and other big polluters they must cut emissions onsite

Australia's Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen has stated that he has made it "crystal clear" to industrial polluters like BHP that they must reduce their onsite emissions. This comes after leaked documents revealed BHP has scaled back climate commitments, including scrapping a global emissions reduction project and delaying renewable energy initiatives.

Christopher Knaus, Adam Morton and Dan Jervis-BardyThe Guardian - World NewsFiled 2026-05-26 · 00:48 GMTLean · Center-LeftRead · 4 min
Chris Bowen says he has made it ‘crystal clear’ to BHP and other big polluters they must cut emissions onsite
The Guardian - World NewsFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
801words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Australia's Climate Change Minister Chris Bowen has stated that he has made it "crystal clear" to industrial polluters like BHP that they must reduce their onsite emissions. This comes after leaked documents revealed BHP has scaled back climate commitments, including scrapping a global emissions reduction project and delaying renewable energy initiatives. Experts suggest this backtracking highlights weaknesses in the government's safeguard mechanism policy and the impact of a fossil fuel tax break for large miners. While BHP claims significant emission reductions and a transition to renewables, the company cites a lack of available battery-electric trucks for its slowed progress on operational decarbonisation. Independent MP Kate Chaney advocates for tightening the safeguard mechanism and reforming the diesel fuel tax credit scheme to incentivize stronger decarbonisation efforts.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 4Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Environmental
Political Strategy
Tone
Measured
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

4 extracted
01

Madeleine King is not concerned about the revelations and states BHP is 'doing their job'.

quoteMadeleine King
Confidence
1.00
02

Chris Bowen expects industrial polluters, including BHP, to reduce their onsite emissions.

quoteChris Bowen
Confidence
1.00
03

The safeguard mechanism needs to be tightened to incentivize onsite emission cuts rather than offsets.

factualKate Chaney
Confidence
0.90
04

BHP has reportedly scrapped a project to reduce global emissions and delayed renewables projects.

factualGuardian and ABC investigation (based on leaked documents)
Confidence
0.90
§ 04

Full report

4 min read · 801 words
Chris Bowen says he wants to see all large emitters reducing emissions onsite: ‘That applies to BHP and everyone else.’ Photograph: Lukas Coch/EPA View image in fullscreen Chris Bowen says he wants to see all large emitters reducing emissions onsite: ‘That applies to BHP and everyone else.’ Photograph: Lukas Coch/EPA Chris Bowen says he has made it ‘crystal clear’ to BHP and other big polluters they must cut emissions onsite Mining giant’s backsliding on climate commitments due to ‘weakness’ of policy, Kate Chaney says Adam Morton: Big Mining gets a $4bn tax break to use Fossil Fuel. It’s a strange way to tackle emissions Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Australia’s Climate Change minister, Chris Bowen, says he has made it “crystal clear” that he expects industrial polluters including BHP to reduce their onsite emissions after leaked documents revealed that the world’s biggest miner has backtracked on climate action. An exclusive investigation based on documents leaked to by the Guardian and the ABC show BHP has scrapped a project to significantly reduce global emissions, delayed vast renewables projects in the Pilbara and war-gamed options to push the electrification of its polluting diesel truck and train fleets into the next two decades. It did so despite internal memos as recently as 2023 saying that: “Urgent decarbonisation in line with BHP’s public commitments effectively underpins [the Western Australian iron ore division’s licence to operate, sustain and grow.” Experts and analysts say the slowdown in BHP’s decarbonisation progress shows the failure of a key climate policy, the Safeguard Mechanism, and the influence of the diesel tax break the federal government gives to big miners including BHP. Bowen said on Tuesday that BHP was still subject to the Safeguard Mechanism and he had made his expectations “crystal clear” to emitters publicly and privately. He said the safeguard did “provide some flexibility” because the roughly 200 major industrial polluters that it applied to faced “different challenges and opportunities” to cut emissions. “But I want to see all large emitters reducing emissions onsite,” he said. “That applies to BHP and everyone else.” Earlier the resources minister, Madeleine King, said she was not concerned about the revelations and BHP was “doing their job”. “BHP is committed to cutting emissions,” she told ABC radio. “They will make their commercial decisions, as do others. BHP and other miners are subject to the Safeguard Mechanism.” The independent MP Kate Chaney said the safeguard needed to be tightened so companies had stronger incentives to cut emissions onsite, rather than pay for an unlimited number of contentious carbon offsets. “It’s important that companies have flexibility in the way they reduce emissions, but it’s the government’s job to drive ambitious decarbonisation for a safe climate and stable economy,” she said. Chaney said the government should also reform the diesel fuel tax credit scheme that gives some industry a full rebate on the 52.6c a litre applied to fuel. Chaney said the rebate should be limited for the “largest and most profitable companies like BHP” but left in place for farmers and small businesses. She said the current version, under which BHP receives more than $600m a year in fuel tax credits, meant “we have our foot on the break and accelerator at the same time”, as the incentive to keep burning diesel was greater than that to cut emissions by shifting to renewable energy and electric trucks and trains. “Large resource companies like BHP produce a huge chunk of Australia’s emissions,” she said. “Without strong decarbonisation from these companies, Australia will not be able to meet its emissions targets and international commitments. “But companies will always play within the rules that have been set. This speaks more to weakness in government policy than a failure of business.” In a statement, BHP said it was making significant strides in emission reduction, cutting emissions by 36% from 2020 levels. It has a medium-term target of 30% by 2030 and a goal of net zero by 2050. BHP points to analysis that it is one of the best performers on emission reductions of large publicly listed companies and has transitioned 70% of its energy use to renewables. The company blames its slowed progress on operational decarbonisation on the lack of availability of battery-electric trucks. It says it is trialling the technology but it is not yet ready to deploy at scale. Fortescue, one of its main competitors, says the technology is ready and has ordered hundreds of battery-electric trucks. It is expecting to be able to run without any fossil fuels for 24-hour periods by 2027, though it recently was responsible for a spike in emissions. Explore more on these topics BHP The BHP files Chris Bowen Australian politics Greenhouse gas emissions Mining (Business) Mining (Environment) Pollution news Share Reuse this content
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
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Keywords & salience

10 terms
onsite emissions
1.00
industrial polluters
0.90
climate commitments
0.90
decarbonisation
0.80
safeguard mechanism
0.70
chris bowen
0.60
bhp
0.60
emissions reduction
0.50
fossil fuel
0.40
renewables projects
0.40
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Topic connections

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