Editor's Choice


Achieving zero emissions

March 2023 Editor's Choice

Achieving net zero emissions by 2050 will require a complete transformation of the energy landscape. The world wants an energy revolution. It wants a quick transition to a smarter, brighter, more sustainable future. ABB understands the urgency of this need. However, we also know that the transition cannot happen overnight.

Real progress will take a balanced approach, with a journey mindset, to make strategic investments scaled over time to reduce carbon emissions, waste and cost. The transition needs partners to enable the pathway with ROI, today and in the future − partners that offer real solutions today and are willing to invest in needed innovation for our low carbon future.

As your partner in a low carbon future, ABB can bring balance to this equation by enabling safe, smart and sustainable investment in our low carbon future. By combining the full power of our integrated automation, electrification and digitalisation solutions, we will help you meet your commitments and maximise the value of your operational investments, while reducing carbon emissions, waste and cost throughout the energy transition journey. Not only ABB as a company, but also our customers, want to contribute to a low carbon society. Yet this requires a willingness to relinquish our collective dependency on the forms of energy that result in the slow poisoning of the planet.

The first step in achieving carbon neutrality is to deploy digital solutions for smart green buildings and energy management such as monitoring, control and optimisation, which is the core of ABB’s Mission to Zero offering. The next step is to increase energy efficiency by utilising building management systems and installing new, highly efficient motors and drives, for example. Maximising electrification with heat pumps and an EV charging infrastructure is also important. In summary, smartification, digitalisation and electrification of everything, coupled with energy efficiency and renewable electricity, is proving to be the solution for most carbon emissions. Nevertheless, some hurdles still exist.

From a technology standpoint, excessive consumption of electricity by inefficient equipment (for example, legacy HVAC systems, drives, pumps, etc.) or simply due to poor asset or occupancy management, result in vast energy wastage. This presents a huge potential for smart building energy management systems, coupled with highly efficient variable speed drives, purposely built and configured for the application.

Moreover electrification of heat in buildings with improper insulation can be inefficient. This creates a need for carbon-free high-temperature heating from bio-oil, biogas or hydrogen. From a business model standpoint, few building owners can afford deep energy efficiency retrofits. This is creating a need for OPEX-based financing models like leasing or X-as-a-service. From a go-to-market standpoint, building owners expect one-stop-shop solutions. This creates a need for integrated end-to-end solutions and a necessity for such a solution as Mission to Zero to be adopted.

Products and Solutions

According to ABB’s Technology Blueprint, a typical smart building will use interconnected technologies to improve comfort and performance across energy management, water use, air conditioning, access, automation, lighting, remote monitoring, and communication networks. Thanks to ABB’s solution areas within the ABB Ability Building Ecosystem, building operators and facility managers can have digital control of all these elements, and smart buildings will capture their inherent opportunities to become more environmentally friendly – from substantially contributing to carbon reduction targets, through efficiency gains in heating and cooling equipment and in the building itself.

The ABB digital solutions enable constant surveillance and optimum control of energy production, consumption and storage. Largely autonomous, this learning system calculates the optimum energy flow based on predictive data, and compensates for deviations in real time. In a Mission to Zero site, these technologies are combined for a holistic approach that can be easily scaled according to the requirements of the building.

The digitalisation of buildings through connected technologies and building automation also has a key role to play in helping to manage grid resiliency and reliability, and in reducing energy costs while increasing energy efficiency.

Moreover, it is an important step towards the energy transition, as it enables the building to provide value-adding services to the modern energy grid and thus supports the shift from ‘consumer’ to ‘prosumer’ – facilitating concepts such as virtual power plants and maximising the value of distributed energy resources (photovoltaic, batteries) on a broader scale.

Within this context, the programme strongly leverages the ABB Ability Energy and Asset Manager for monitoring, optimisation and maintenance prediction using big data and artificial intelligence. The typical solution scope for a Mission to Zero project includes:

• Distributed energy resources such as on-site photovoltaic technology, EV-chargers, energy storage, motors and drives, power supply and protection, and digital solutions for energy management, including monitoring, control and multipurpose optimisation.

• Building automation and HVAC controls such as digital integration platforms, building automation and control, HVAC control and optimisation, space management, wellness and productivity, lighting and shading control, and presence detection.

Although borne from the electrification business area, Mission to Zero spans the entire organisation, and many product and solution sets, combined with third party technology via our partnership ecosystem. These include:

• Building control and automation through the ABB Ability Building Ecosystem, including HVAC, lighting, and shading control and automation via i-bus®KNX and ABB Cylon BACnet solutions.

• Metering, monitoring and optimisation of electrical power and energy flows through the ABB Ability Energy and Asset Manager platform.

• Power distribution with ABB System pro E power or MNS 3.0 low-voltage switchgear, including Emax 2 air circuit breakers or NEO Gear low voltage switchgear solutions.

• Electric vehicle charging infrastructure (EVCI) for fast (DC) and slow (AC) charging applications.

• Highly efficient and smart electrical motors and variable speed drives.

• Battery energy storage systems (BESS) for maximising PV self-consumption and peak-shaving.

• Photovoltaic systems for local green energy generation (provided by partners).

With our 2030 sustainability strategy, we are actively enabling a low carbon society, while working with our customers and suppliers to implement sustainable practices across our value chain and the lifecycle of our products and solutions. We are equally committed to driving social progress, along with our suppliers and in our communities.

A key part of our 2030 sustainability strategy is to support our customers and suppliers to reduce their emissions and achieve carbon neutrality in our own operations. Our greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets have been validated by the Science Based Targets initiative as being in line with the 1,5°C scenario of the Paris Agreement.

To ensure that we are focused on achieving our goals, our sustainability targets are integrated into our decision-making processes, plus we have accountabilities and incentive plans in place to drive action.


Credit(s)



Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

World-class hoist maintenance
ABB South Africa Motion Control & Drives
In underground mining, hoists are among the most significant investments a company can make. ABB has developed ABB Care for Hoisting, designed to help mining companies transition from reactive or even preventive maintenance approaches to a truly predictive model, maximising hoist performance, extending asset life, and safeguarding operational continuity.

Read more...
A South African legacy in telemetry
Editor's Choice Industrial Wireless
Telemetry is becoming a vital component of industrial strategy, allowing companies to harness real-time data to optimise processes and reduce waste. One company leading this technological shift is Interlynx.

Read more...
Case History 199: Another example of the effectiveness of cascade control
Michael Brown Control Engineering Editor's Choice Fieldbus & Industrial Networking
In my last article I wrote about how cascade control systems can effectively overcome valve problems. This article gives another example of how a temperature control was able to perform well, in spite of really severe valve problems.

Read more...
Upgrading legacy automation
Omron Electronics Editor's Choice Fieldbus & Industrial Networking
Legacy automation is characterised by technology in the later stages of its useful life. As new automation technologies continue to emerge and interconnect at an exponential rate, failing to integrate these technologies can widen the gap between the competitive and the obsolete.

Read more...
Planetary gear units for high torque requirements
SEW-EURODRIVE Editor's Choice Motion Control & Drives
Packing a compact design, along with high torque and low-speed outputs, the new SEW PPK and SEW P2.e planetary gear units from SEW-EURODRIVE offer new capabilities in continuous heavy-duty applications where space is at a premium.

Read more...
These robots crawl into every nook and cranny
DNH Tradeserve t/a DNH Technologies Editor's Choice Motion Control & Drives
Inuktun's small crawler robot magnetically sticks to metal walls and is able to move in all directions. It carries cameras, sensors and tools for inspection or maintenance work in tight pipes and on the outer hulls of tanks or ships. All crawler modules and cameras are equipped with brushed DC motors from Swiss drive specialist, maxon using various motor-gearhead combinations.

Read more...
Swiss watchmaking meets hypercar power
Horne Technologies Editor's Choice
The display of Bugatti’s upcoming luxury model, Tourbillon will be something truly special. Instead of a digital version, the driver will see a genuine Swiss timepiece behind the steering wheel.

Read more...
Reinventing the wheel
Editor's Choice
Once a curiosity in the early automotive age, in-wheel motors are now re-emerging with real promise. From electric cars to commercial vehicles and even aircraft, they are on the verge of transforming transportation engineering.

Read more...
Creating new magnets for electric motors
Editor's Choice
Innomotics, a global specialist in electric motors and large drive systems, is coordinating a consortium for a research project on ‘Integrated Product and Process Innovation for Electric Drives’.

Read more...
A milestone in electrical safety
ABB South Africa Electrical Power & Protection
Celebrating a milestone in electrical safety, ABB proudly marks the 100-year anniversary of its revolutionary Miniature Circuit Breaker.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved