Under the patronage of His Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, President of the UAE

تحت رعاية صاحب السمو الشيخ محمد بن زايد آل نهيان، رئيس دولة الإمارات العربية المتحدة

Supported by

Benjamin Lechuga

Chief Strategy & Sustainability Officer

Technip Energies

Benjamin
Benjamin

Benjamin Lechuga is Chief Strategy and Sustainability Officer and Member of the executive Committee of Technip Energies. He is responsible for driving and implementing the Strategy, M&A and Investments, and Sustainability agendas. He is also Board Member of Reju, a Technip Energies company dedicated to solve the big problem of polyester waste. He spent the first part of his career with Shell in the UK in the Gas and Power division working on large LNG projects in Africa, Asia and the Americas, as well as in Shell Trading. From 2007 to 2013, he held management roles in Paris for Société Générale AM/ 4D Global Energy Capital, a private equity fund dedicated to the energy value chain, and for Areva Renewables delivering strategic planning and business development initiatives. In 2014, Benjamin Lechuga joined the financial advisory business at Deloitte in Switzerland, where he developed strategy, performance improvement and M&A advisory activities in the energy, infrastructure and industrial sectors. Benjamin Lechuga graduated from Ecole Polytechnique and Ecole Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées in Paris.

Session Overview
Tuesday, 4 November
15:20
Decarbonisation Conference Room A 15:20 - 16:00
Sustainable procurement: how suppliers and contractors are driving low-carbon value chains

More comprehensive global disclosure regulations are encouraging companies to reduce emissions across their value chains, as well as within their own operations. Frameworks such as the European Union’s (EU) Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and initiatives like the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s climate disclosure rules have driven a new era of supply chain transparency and accountability. Through collaborative decarbonisation, supplier engagement is opening new avenues for cost efficiency, innovation and resilience. Emerging business models are shifting this dynamic, as suppliers and engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractors co-invest in decarbonisation initiatives that align incentives and embed long-term value into project delivery. Meanwhile, structured supplier programmes and green finance tools are enabling the adoption of low-carbon materials and collaborative emissions tracking. To decarbonise supply chains at scale and deliver collective progress, operators will need to move beyond transactional procurement and form long-term partnerships that support innovation, risk-sharing and emissions reductions.

Attendee insights:

Discover how new forms of supplier engagement are unlocking opportunities for cost-effective decarbonisation and reshaping procurement's role in building low-emission, future-ready value chains.

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