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Adani contractor Siemens shifts away from coal

Germany’s Siemens, under fire for its contract with Adani’s coal project, has unveiled plans to shift to a coal power-free future.

German activists protest outside Siemens’ AGM in February over its rail contract with Adani. Picture: AFP
German activists protest outside Siemens’ AGM in February over its rail contract with Adani. Picture: AFP

German industrial giant Siemens has unveiled plans to set its energy subsidiary on the road towards a coal power-free future, as it won backing from shareholders to spin off the unit.

Days after Germany agreed to end use of coal-fired power generation by 2038, the conglomerate’s chief executive Joe Kaeser underlined plans to shift its division Siemens Energy towards a greener model.

“I’ve requested that the executive board of Siemens Energy AG rapidly submit a plan for exiting coal-fired power generation in a way that meets the needs of our stakeholders,” Mr Kaeser told shareholders gathering to vote on plans to float the unit on the stock market.

“This plan will be more responsible than the demands being raised unilaterally by some activists, but it will certainly be more rigorous than laggards consider necessary,” he added, without giving a timeline for the exit.

The industrial giant had been under fire from climate protesters for providing rail signalling equipment to Adani’s controversial planned Carmichael coal mine in Australia.

With protesters chanting outside a general assembly meeting in February, Mr Kaeser had said then that his company would make 1 billion ($US1.1 billion) available between now and 2025 to identify and reduce greenhouse emissions in its supply chains.

However Siemens said it would not sever its relationship with Adani because there was “practically no legally and economically responsible way to unwind the contract”.

Meanwhile the plan to float Siemens Energy won overwhelming approval, with 99.36 per cent votes in favour of spinning off the unit with a net book value of around 17 billion ($US19.2 billion) as of March 31, 2020.

Like other once-sprawling German conglomerates such as Thyssenkrupp, Bayer or Continental, Siemens is slimming down via successive spin-offs and flotations of units that no longer fit into its leaders’ vision.

The conventional energy division with its oil and gas, gas turbines, power transmission and related services businesses will therefore join medical devices arm Healthineers and light bulb unit Osram on the stock market by September.

Siemens Energy will also own two thirds of wind turbine maker Gamesa.

AFP

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/mining-energy/adani-contractor-siemens-shifts-away-from-coal/news-story/ea4b4e78660e2812a6d369a00c8eb728