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Oil and gas companies say biofuels and hydrogen are key

OGCI's latest studies explore how hydrogen and biofuels can significantly reduce emissions in transport

The Oil and Gas Climate Initiative (OGCI), a coalition of 12 major energy companies, is ramping up efforts to decarbonise transport.

With a decade of progress under its belt—including cutting methane emissions in half and reducing flaring by 45%—OGCI is now focused on hydrogen and biofuels as key solutions to one of the world’s biggest sources of CO₂ emissions.

Since 2017, OGCI members have invested nearly $100 billion in low-carbon technologies, from biofuels to carbon capture.

Building on this, the group has released new studies showing how hydrogen and biofuels could play a crucial role in reducing emissions from transport.

For heavy-duty transport, hydrogen is seen as a game-changer. The Road Ahead for Hydrogen-Powered Mobility report highlights the need for coordinated infrastructure, regulatory clarity and industry collaboration to unlock hydrogen’s full potential.

Meanwhile, for the maritime sector, biofuels could offer a major emissions reduction opportunity. The Biomass for Marine 2025 study, projects a significant rise in global biomass availability by 2050, much of which could be used for marine fuels.

While adoption of hydrogen and biofuels is expected to remain gradual until 2030, a sharp increase is anticipated by 2040 as technology scales up. T

Amy Bason, Deputy VP of strategy and policy at OGCI said:

“Decarbonising transport is critical to tackling climate change and low carbon fuels play a vital role in achieving that goal.

“By bringing together the world’s leading energy companies and industry partners, OGCI is accelerating the development and deployment of real, scalable solutions toward a low-carbon future.”

As the transport sector faces mounting pressure to meet net-zero targets, OGCI is pushing ahead with emerging technologies that can help cut emissions at scale.

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