Iron ore miners could face billions more in fuel costs due to Iran war, Fortescue says

Fortescue’s first large-scale Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) is seen at North Star Junction in Pilbara, Western Australia. (AFP)
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Updated 23 March 2026
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Iron ore miners could face billions more in fuel costs due to Iran war, Fortescue says

  • The company gets most of its fuel from Southeast Asia, but was “comfortable” with current fuel stocks ⁠as long as the war in Iran ‌does not escalate

BEIJING: Iron ore miners are at risk of incurring billions of dollars more in fuel costs if diesel prices continue to ​rise, a senior executive at Australia’s Fortescue said on Monday.
The US-Israeli war on Iran has all but stopped shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, sending oil and gas prices higher and tightening the supply of diesel, a main transport fuel for the mining sector.
“A 10-cent change in the price of diesel impacts ‌us by $70 million,” said ‌Dino Otranto, metals and operations ​chief executive ‌officer ⁠at ​global miner ⁠Fortescue, in an interview on Monday. “If you look at our competitors, the top four, every 10-cent movement has a half a billion US dollar impact on the cost structure.”
The company gets most of its fuel from Southeast Asia, but was “comfortable” with current fuel stocks, he said, ⁠as long as the war in Iran ‌does not escalate.
The world’s fourth-largest ‌iron ore supplier has set ​some of the most ambitious ‌decarbonization targets among Australia’s major miners, which Otranto said ‌had helped it save fuel costs.
He said Fortescue would save at least $100 million over the next 12 months on diesel costs from its push to electrify operations with renewable energy. ‌The company planned to cut consumption by 1 billion liters of diesel equivalent over ⁠the next few ⁠years.
“We announced a very aggressive decarbonization agenda some years ago,” he said.
“For a number of years, that plan has been met with a lot of criticism, but now the tides are shifting ... now our shareholders say, you need to do this faster,” said Otranto.
Fortescue is in conversation with China’s state iron ore buyer China Mineral Resources Group, said Otranto, who described the talks as dynamic and not confrontational.
He declined to comment ​on negotiations about ​supply terms for this year.