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    Home»Magazine»How ABP is turning maritime hubs into clean energy powerhouses
    Magazine

    How ABP is turning maritime hubs into clean energy powerhouses

    Daniel snowBy Daniel snowMay 18, 202513 Mins Read
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    This
    interview
    is
    part
    of
    the

    Inside
    the
    Mind
    of
    the
    CxO

    series,
    which
    explores
    a
    wide
    range
    of
    critical
    decisions
    faced
    by
    chief
    executives
    around
    the
    world.

    Maritime
    ports
    have
    long
    been
    engines
    of
    the
    global
    economy.
    Of
    crucial
    importance
    as
    trading
    and
    supply
    chain
    hubs,
    they
    have
    a
    deep
    history
    in
    commerce,
    with
    some
    dating
    back
    thousands
    of
    years.
    Now,
    they’re
    emerging
    as
    leaders
    of
    a
    21st-century
    tech-enabled
    energy
    transition.
    Responsible
    for
    80%
    of
    worldwide
    trade,
    ports
    host
    and
    service
    a
    range
    of
    adjacent
    industries.
    They’re
    uniquely
    positioned
    at
    the
    nexus
    of
    an
    ecosystem
    of
    businesses
    urgently
    responding
    to
    emerging
    technologies,
    geopolitical
    risks,
    and
    climate
    change.

    Related
    insights

    The
    climate
    crisis,
    in
    particular,
    has
    been
    a
    catalyst
    of
    innovation
    for
    Associated
    British
    Ports
    (ABP),
    which
    handles
    a
    quarter
    of
    the
    UK’s
    seaborne
    trade.
    The
    company
    has
    been
    privately
    held
    since
    1982,
    and
    it’s
    now
    owned
    by
    a
    mix
    of
    pension
    and
    sovereign
    wealth
    funds.
    ABP’s
    21
    port
    locations
    and
    8,600-acre
    land
    portfolio
    are
    central
    to
    its
    strategy:
    rethinking
    and
    repurposing
    land
    use
    for
    renewable
    energy
    projects
    like
    offshore
    wind
    and
    solar
    installation,
    and
    exploring
    diverse
    business
    models,
    including
    partnerships
    with
    climate
    tech
    start-ups.

    Max
    Harris,
    ABP’s
    group
    head
    of
    strategy
    and
    sustainability,
    oversees
    its
    new
    Energy
    Ventures
    Accelerator
    (EVA)
    program.
    The
    initiative
    is
    poised
    to
    help
    deepen
    the
    port
    operator’s
    relationship
    with
    its
    carbon-intensive
    industry
    customers,
    including
    shipping
    companies
    and
    steel
    manufacturers,
    by
    connecting
    them
    with
    climate
    tech
    start-ups
    that
    can
    help
    tackle
    big
    challenges,
    like
    decarbonizing
    industrial
    heat.
    It’s
    also
    a
    chance
    for
    ABP
    to
    invest
    in
    potential
    customers
    of
    the
    future,
    as
    these
    start-ups
    seek
    to
    scale
    commercially.

    Harris
    recently
    talked
    to

    strategy
    +business
    about
    how
    the
    evolving
    role
    of
    ports
    creates
    opportunities
    for
    ABP
    to
    test
    new
    business
    models,
    address
    its
    own
    climate
    challenges,
    and
    help
    its
    customers
    advance
    hydrogen
    power,
    offshore
    wind,
    carbon
    capture
    and
    storage,
    and
    other
    sustainability-related
    goals.

    The
    following
    is
    an
    edited
    version
    of
    the
    conversation.


    S+B:
    How
    have
    the
    needs
    of
    your
    traditional
    ports
    customers
    changed?
    MAX
    HARRIS:

    Decarbonization
    is,
    overwhelmingly,
    the
    main
    megatrend
    that
    customers
    want
    to
    talk
    about.
    These
    customers
    include
    shipping
    lines
    and
    logistics
    companies
    with
    heavy-goods
    vehicles
    coming
    in
    on
    ferries.
    Aside
    from
    that,
    it’s
    about
    supply
    chain
    cost
    efficiency
    and
    having
    greater
    visibility
    of
    interconnected
    operations.
    But,
    absolutely,
    decarbonization
    is
    a
    key
    focus.
    Access
    to
    green
    power,
    greener
    fuels,
    and
    lower-carbon
    fuels
    is
    important
    for
    our
    customers,
    and
    that
    access
    is
    seen
    as
    a
    key
    enabler
    of
    their
    broader
    strategic
    ambitions.

    One
    of
    the
    biggest
    challenges
    that
    we’re
    facing
    in
    the
    UK,
    in
    terms
    of
    our
    net-zero
    trajectory,
    is
    how
    to
    decarbonize
    industrial
    heat,
    which
    is
    required
    for
    all
    sorts
    of
    different
    manufacturing
    processes.
    Hydrogen
    is
    the
    leading
    candidate
    to
    help
    to
    decarbonize
    the
    creation
    of
    industrial
    heat.
    But
    the
    challenge
    is
    to
    provide
    that
    clean
    hydrogen
    at
    a
    competitive
    cost,
    where
    the
    green
    premium
    that
    manufacturers
    and
    big
    industrial
    users
    pay
    is
    not
    so
    significant
    that
    it
    becomes
    unattractive.
    So
    ABP
    is
    working
    with
    a
    number
    of
    innovative
    hydrogen
    producers
    that
    are
    looking
    at
    different
    technologies
    to
    reduce
    the
    cost
    of
    hydrogen
    production,
    which
    will
    then
    feed
    into
    industrial
    users,
    so
    that
    they
    can
    decarbonize
    their
    heat
    production.
    It’s
    a
    really
    exciting
    journey,
    where
    we
    can
    look
    to
    make
    hydrogen
    more
    cost-competitive
    whilst
    also
    driving
    the
    net-zero
    agenda.


    S+B:
    This
    seems
    like
    a
    radical
    departure
    from
    the
    role
    that’s
    typically
    associated
    with
    ports.
    Can
    you
    tell
    us
    more
    about
    ABP’s
    evolving
    remit
    as
    a
    modern
    port?
    HARRIS:

    The
    fundamental
    role
    of
    ports
    has
    been
    the
    same
    throughout
    history:
    lifting
    cargo
    on
    and
    off
    vessels,
    and
    getting
    it
    to
    end-customers.
    That’s
    still,
    by
    far,
    the
    majority
    of
    our
    business.
    But
    we
    deploy
    a
    mixture
    of
    business
    models.
    We
    have
    land
    assets
    and
    infrastructure
    assets.
    Customers
    come
    and
    use
    our
    land,
    and
    then
    they’ll
    pay
    us
    to
    rent
    it,
    so
    that’s
    basically
    a
    landowner
    model.
    But
    we’re
    also
    an
    infrastructure
    business,
    because
    our
    customers
    use
    our
    cranes,
    our
    quaysides,
    our
    jetties
    and
    marine
    infrastructure,
    and
    sometimes
    they
    will
    operate
    the
    terminals.

    To
    meet
    the
    needs
    of
    our
    customers,
    we’ve
    broadened
    our
    business
    model
    from
    facilitating
    and
    enabling
    the
    import
    and
    export
    of
    cargo
    to
    also
    include
    enabling
    the
    energy
    transition.
    It
    doesn’t
    mean
    that
    we’re
    not
    focused
    on
    trade
    anymore:
    that
    will
    always
    be
    the
    foundation
    of
    our
    business.
    And,
    really,
    [these
    new
    business
    models]
    are
    just
    an
    expansion
    of
    what
    we’re
    trying
    to
    do
    by
    looking
    at
    the
    energy
    transition
    and
    how
    we
    support
    hydrogen,
    carbon
    capture
    and
    storage
    [CCS],
    and
    offshore
    wind,
    for
    example.


    S+B:
    How
    are
    you
    leveraging
    your
    existing
    assets
    to
    expand
    your
    business
    models?
    HARRIS:

    There
    has
    been
    a
    business
    shift
    at
    ABP
    toward
    an
    increased
    focus
    on
    land
    assets.
    We
    see
    this
    as
    part
    of
    a
    broader
    adjustment
    in
    the
    industrial
    landscape
    of
    the
    UK,
    where
    there’s
    a
    shift
    toward
    those
    low-carbon
    infrastructure
    types—hydrogen,
    offshore
    wind,
    or
    manufacturing
    facilities
    for
    CCS.

    Over
    the
    last
    few
    years,
    we’ve
    seen
    an
    increase
    in
    manufacturing
    taking
    place
    at
    our
    ports.
    A
    great
    example
    of
    that
    is
    Siemens
    Gamesa’s
    Green
    Port
    Hull
    [GPH]
    offshore
    wind
    [turbine]
    blade-manufacturing
    facility,
    located
    at
    the
    Port
    of
    Hull.
    That’s,
    by
    far,
    the
    biggest
    example
    of
    offshore
    wind
    manufacturing
    in
    the
    UK,
    using
    state-of-the-art
    technology.
    Since
    the
    project
    became
    operational
    at
    our
    port
    in
    2016,
    GPH
    has
    supported
    both
    growth
    in
    the
    UK
    offshore
    wind
    sector
    and
    the
    broader
    European
    deployment
    of
    offshore
    wind.

    Likewise,
    we’re
    seeing
    that
    manufacturers
    want
    to
    be
    located
    at
    the
    heart
    of
    large
    industrial
    ecosystems,
    including
    our
    ports
    in
    the
    Humber
    region
    of
    the
    UK,
    in
    South
    Wales,
    in
    Southampton,
    and
    in
    East
    Anglia.
    We
    see
    the
    use
    of
    our
    land
    beside
    the
    water
    as
    a
    critical
    driver
    for
    us
    in
    terms
    of
    attracting
    investment
    and
    manufacturing,
    which
    brings
    with
    it
    jobs
    and
    investment
    in
    coastal
    communities.

    Ports
    are
    also
    perfect
    locations
    to
    test
    next-generation
    technologies.
    At
    the
    Port
    of
    Southampton,
    we
    worked
    with
    Verizon
    to
    deploy
    the
    first
    private
    5G
    network
    on
    an
    industrial
    site
    in
    the
    UK.
    [Our
    initiatives]
    are
    really
    focused
    on
    industrial,
    internet
    of
    things
    use
    cases.
    And
    one
    great
    example
    of
    that
    is
    how
    we
    work
    with
    our
    automotive
    customers
    that
    are
    bringing
    vehicles
    into
    the
    UK
    market.
    With
    better
    5G
    connectivity,
    we
    can
    use
    our
    terminal
    operating
    systems
    to
    optimize
    the
    path
    of
    the
    vehicles
    from
    the
    ship
    or
    to
    the
    storage
    location,
    based
    on
    either
    time
    or
    cost,
    and
    now,
    carbon.
    Having
    better
    5G
    connectivity
    really
    makes
    a
    difference
    not
    only
    to
    supply
    chain
    cost
    reduction
    but
    also
    to
    CO2
    reduction.


    S+B:
    Can
    you
    tell
    us
    about
    ABP’s
    approach
    to
    its
    own
    climate
    change
    challenges?
    HARRIS:

    We
    can’t
    credibly
    talk
    about
    enabling
    the
    energy
    transition
    without
    taking
    care
    of
    our
    own
    house
    when
    it
    comes
    to
    sustainability.
    There
    are,
    inevitably,
    a
    number
    of
    challenges
    that
    we’ll
    face
    over
    the
    next
    ten,
    20,
    30
    years.
    Rising
    sea
    levels
    are
    certainly
    high
    among
    them,
    and
    that’s
    one
    of
    our
    biggest
    long-term
    risks.
    So,
    we’re
    making
    sure
    that
    our
    quay
    walls
    are
    the
    right
    height
    to
    protect
    against
    floods
    and
    storm
    surges.
    We
    also
    need
    to
    work
    with
    public
    sector
    authorities
    around
    broader
    flood
    defenses
    and
    support
    them
    in
    their
    investments.

    As
    part
    of
    our
    sustainability
    strategy,
    we
    have
    an
    operational
    net-zero
    target
    of
    2040.
    One
    of
    the
    ways
    we
    are
    pursuing
    this
    goal
    is
    to
    invest
    in
    solar
    energy
    generation.
    ABP’s
    ports
    have
    a
    lot
    of
    warehouses
    with
    roof-mounted
    solar
    panels,
    to
    optimize
    the
    use
    of
    space
    for
    renewable
    energy
    generation.
    Alongside
    onshore
    wind
    turbines,
    we
    have
    32
    megawatts
    of
    installed
    capacity
    for
    clean
    energy
    generation
    around
    our
    ports,
    and
    that
    reduces
    our
    reliance
    on
    the
    UK’s
    national
    grid
    and
    allows
    us
    to
    use
    cleaner,
    cheaper
    power.
    In
    addition,
    our
    customers
    can
    take
    advantage
    of
    that
    cleaner,
    cheaper
    power
    at
    our
    ports:
    We
    own
    the
    local
    grid
    around
    our
    port
    assets.
    Many
    of
    our
    ports
    are
    large-scale
    industrial
    sites
    reaching
    over
    1,000
    acres
    in
    size.
    So,
    we
    sell
    power
    to
    our
    tenants
    and
    our
    customers
    on
    those
    port
    sites.


    S+B:
    With
    sustainability
    playing
    a
    greater
    part
    in
    business
    strategy,
    we’re
    seeing
    C-suite
    roles
    evolve.
    Can
    you
    tell
    us
    a
    bit
    about
    your
    role,
    and
    why
    ABP
    has
    decided
    to
    unite
    strategy
    and
    sustainability
    in
    one
    office?
    HARRIS:

    There
    are
    three
    elements
    to
    my
    role.
    Firstly,
    I
    lead
    on
    corporate
    strategy
    development
    and
    implementation.
    This
    goes
    hand
    in
    hand
    with
    developing
    and
    delivering
    our
    sustainability
    strategy.
    And
    then
    a
    new
    piece
    of
    my
    role,
    one
    that
    crosses
    both
    strategy
    and
    sustainability,
    is
    taking
    the
    first
    steps
    into
    innovation
    and
    supporting
    start-up
    ventures.
    This
    is
    a
    new
    commercial
    model
    we’re
    looking
    to
    explore—to
    make
    sure
    that
    we
    can
    support
    the
    changing
    needs
    of
    our
    customers
    as
    the
    energy
    transition
    takes
    hold
    and
    as
    decarbonization
    becomes
    the
    norm
    for
    the
    UK
    economy.

    Sustainability
    is
    inherent
    in
    our
    business
    model and
    our
    commercial
    focus,
    because
    all
    of
    our
    major
    customers
    are
    either
    challenged
    by
    the
    decarbonization
    imperative,
    seeking
    to
    reduce
    emissions
    and
    pivot
    their
    business
    to
    a
    cleaner
    future,
    or
    they’re
    looking
    to
    scale
    their
    clean
    energy
    initiatives,
    which
    requires
    a
    lot
    of
    investment
    infrastructure
    enablers—which
    we
    can
    help
    provide.
    Our
    coverage
    across
    those
    different
    segments
    of
    the
    UK
    economy
    means
    that
    our
    role
    in
    enabling
    the
    energy
    transition,
    and
    broader
    sustainability
    objectives,
    is
    massive.

    Sustainability
    is
    inherent
    in
    our
    business
    model,
    because
    all
    of
    our
    major
    customers
    are
    either
    challenged
    by
    the
    decarbonization
    imperative
    or
    they’re
    looking
    to
    scale
    their
    clean
    energy
    initiatives.”


    S+B:
    Tell
    us
    about
    ABP’s
    Energy
    Ventures
    Accelerator.
    How
    did
    the
    idea
    for
    this
    climate
    tech
    start-up
    platform
    first
    take
    shape?
    HARRIS
    :
    It’s
    gone
    from
    a
    seed
    of
    an
    idea
    around
    corporate
    venturing
    to
    a
    groupwide
    strategy
    anchored
    in
    using
    our
    land
    more
    effectively
    and
    supporting
    growing
    green
    energy
    markets
    such
    as
    hydrogen
    and
    offshore
    wind.
    We
    know
    who
    the
    established
    players
    are
    in
    those
    markets,
    but
    we’d
    also
    like
    to
    explore
    who
    the
    emerging
    players
    are
    and
    how
    we
    can
    work
    with
    them.
    [Start-ups]
    don’t
    necessarily
    have
    the
    balance
    sheet
    strength
    to
    be
    a
    traditional
    ABP
    customer,
    because
    we
    look
    to
    sign
    ten,
    15,
    20-plus-year
    contracts.
    They
    can’t
    necessarily
    commit
    to
    that
    length
    of
    contract.
    So,
    we
    needed
    to
    come
    up
    with
    a
    different
    commercial
    model
    in
    order
    to
    work
    with
    those
    types
    of
    start-ups—moving
    into
    commercial
    scale
    operations
    and
    looking
    to
    really
    commercialize
    the
    products
    that
    they’re
    manufacturing.


    S+B:
    Give
    us
    an
    overview
    of
    the
    accelerator.
    What
    types
    of
    technology
    solutions
    are
    you
    zeroing
    in
    on?
    HARRIS:

    The
    Energy
    Ventures
    Accelerator
    is
    a
    12-month
    program
    to
    identify
    the
    highest-potential
    energy
    transition
    start-ups
    in
    the
    hardware
    space.
    Our
    existing
    customers—steelworks,
    oil
    refineries,
    cement
    works—are
    looking
    to
    decarbonize,
    and
    they
    need
    technology
    and
    these
    hardware
    solutions
    to
    get
    there.
    And
    we
    want
    to
    build
    relationships
    with
    the
    big
    players
    of
    the
    future:
    the
    start-ups
    that
    will
    become
    scale-ups
    that
    will
    become
    fully
    established
    industrial
    players.
    Our
    thesis
    is
    that
    our
    existing
    customers
    will
    also
    be
    the
    start-ups’
    customers.
    So,
    we’re
    looking
    to
    attract
    the
    best
    and
    brightest
    international
    start-ups
    to
    come
    to
    our
    ports
    to
    leverage
    our
    land
    and
    infrastructure
    assets,
    and
    also
    to
    meet
    our
    customer
    base
    and
    meet
    the
    local
    stakeholders,
    local
    government,
    local
    councils,
    and
    local
    enterprise
    partnerships.

    We’re
    working
    with
    Plug
    and
    Play,
    a
    large
    Silicon
    Valley–headquartered
    innovation
    platform
    and
    VC
    investor;
    but
    they
    don’t
    just
    do
    software—they’re
    also
    focused
    on
    hard
    tech
    deployment.
    The
    Energy
    Ventures
    Accelerator
    is
    all
    about
    hardware.
    It’s
    not
    SaaS
    [software
    as
    a
    service]
    solutions
    or
    AI.
    This
    is
    about
    physical,
    tangible
    products
    being
    manufactured,
    like
    offshore
    wind
    components.
    There
    are
    over
    65,000
    start-ups
    in
    Plug
    and
    Play’s
    global
    network.
    They
    have
    a
    window
    into
    a
    whole
    different
    world
    than
    we’re
    accustomed
    to
    working
    in,
    and
    so
    they
    can
    help
    us
    broaden
    our
    reach.


    S+B:
    Give
    us
    an
    example
    of
    how
    these
    sorts
    of
    partnerships
    might
    work.
    HARRIS:

    One
    good
    example
    of
    ABP
    working
    with
    start-ups
    to
    support
    innovative
    solutions
    is
    when
    we
    worked
    with
    Terberg,
    which
    manufactures
    terminal
    tractors.
    They
    wanted
    to
    test
    hydrogen
    propulsion
    units
    within
    their
    terminal
    tractors.
    So
    we
    worked
    with
    them
    and
    with
    Air
    Products,
    a
    customer
    of
    ours,
    to
    trial
    these
    terminal
    tractors.
    It
    went
    really
    well,
    and
    our
    staff
    and
    employees
    tested
    the
    fuels,
    using
    hydrogen
    versus
    diesel.
    And
    we’re
    going
    to
    do
    a
    lot
    more
    of
    that,
    where
    we’re
    working
    with
    early-stage
    businesses.

    We’re
    looking
    at
    a
    few
    different
    start-up
    collaboration
    models.
    On
    the
    one
    hand,
    there’s
    pilots
    and
    proof-of-concepts,
    through
    which
    start-ups
    can
    test
    their
    technology
    at
    our
    port
    sites,
    also
    working
    with
    our
    existing
    customers
    to
    trial
    real-world
    applications.
    On
    the
    other,
    we
    might
    take
    equity
    stakes
    in
    start-up
    businesses
    in
    exchange
    for
    discounted
    leases
    and
    commercial
    support.
    But
    we
    could
    also
    look
    at
    special-purpose
    vehicles—companies
    set
    up
    specifically
    to
    build
    a
    product
    in
    one
    of
    our
    ports,
    and
    then
    we
    do
    a
    revenue-sharing
    agreement,
    for
    example.

    We
    also
    provide
    go-to-market
    support,
    connecting
    start-ups
    with
    our
    customers
    and
    with
    the
    broader
    industrial
    scene,
    especially
    in
    places
    like
    the
    Humber
    and
    South
    Wales.
    Part
    of
    those
    investments
    could
    be
    cash-based.
    And
    then
    there
    are
    other
    models,
    like
    a
    go-to-market
    partnership,
    where
    ABP
    plus
    the
    start-up
    can
    offer
    solutions
    to
    shipping
    lines,
    for
    example,
    to
    help
    decarbonize
    their
    operations.


    S+B:
    Fast-forward
    ten
    years,
    when
    these
    new
    projects
    and
    pilots
    will
    have
    had
    a
    chance
    to
    develop.
    What
    will
    ABP’s
    port
    operations
    and
    business
    look
    like?
    HARRIS:

    There’ll
    be
    at-scale
    deployment
    of
    carbon
    capture
    on
    large
    industrial
    units
    around
    our
    ports.
    That
    captured
    CO2
    will
    be
    used
    for
    alternative
    fuels—e-fuels,
    synthesized
    hydrogen,
    and
    CO2
    that
    supports
    low-carbon
    [maritime]
    shipping
    through
    e-methanol
    and
    low-carbon
    aviation
    through
    sustainable
    aviation
    fuel.

    Our
    customer
    base
    will
    be
    more
    diverse.
    Our
    existing
    customers
    will
    have
    made
    huge
    progress
    on
    their
    decarbonization
    journeys
    and
    will
    be
    joined
    by
    new
    types
    of
    customers
    at
    our
    ports—big
    hydrogen
    companies,
    floating
    offshore
    wind
    developers
    and
    manufacturers.
    I
    see
    our
    ports
    as
    focal
    points
    for
    a
    really
    vibrant,
    dynamic
    mix
    of
    medium-sized
    companies
    that
    are
    growing
    and
    that
    are
    really
    innovating,
    together
    with
    large
    players
    that
    are
    also
    innovating
    in
    order
    to
    decarbonize
    their
    operations.
    I
    think
    ports
    are
    going
    to
    be
    a
    real
    center
    of
    gravity
    for
    the
    industrial
    energy
    transition,
    and
    so
    all
    the
    investment
    that
    we’re
    making
    and
    all
    the
    investment
    that
    our
    customers
    will
    make
    on
    top
    of
    that
    is
    going
    to
    make
    a
    really
    big
    impact
    on
    net
    zero
    in
    the
    UK.

    Author
    profile:


    • Shana
      Ting
      Lipton

      is
      a
      senior
      editor
      of

      strategy
      +business.
    Share to: 
    Topics: energy, industrial infrastructure, logistics, manufacturing, strategy, supply chain, sustainability



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