The latest Investing Matters Podcast episode featuring Jeremy Skillington, CEO of Poolbeg Pharma has just been released. Listen here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksRio Tinto Share News (RIO)

Share Price Information for Rio Tinto (RIO)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 5,453.00
Bid: 5,449.00
Ask: 5,451.00
Change: 74.00 (1.38%)
Spread: 2.00 (0.037%)
Open: 5,462.00
High: 5,504.00
Low: 5,444.00
Prev. Close: 5,379.00
RIO Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

RPT-COLUMN-Juukan Gorge is a watershed moment for the world's miners: Andy Home

Wed, 16th Sep 2020 02:00

(Repeats from Tuesday. The opinions expressed here are those of
the author, a columnist for Reuters.)

By Andy Home

LONDON, Sept 15 (Reuters) - Even before Rio Tinto
made its fateful decision to blow up the ancient Aboriginal
rockshelters at Juukan Gorge, this was turning out to be another
terrible year for the mining industry.

In May Russian nickel producer Norilsk spilled 20,000 tonnes
of diesel into the Ambarnaya river in Siberia. The damage to the
Arctic eco-system has been compared by Greenpeace to the
infamous Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989.

Extraordinarily, Norilsk didn't even notice for a couple of
days before learning from social media that something very bad
had happened.

There have been at least two tailings dam collapses, a small
one at a gold mine in Ecuador and a much bigger one at a
molybdenum mine in China, described by the Chinese environmental
ministry as the country's worst in 20 years.

Last week brought another fatal artisanal mine collapse in
the Congo, following an equally lethal mudslide at a jade mine
in Myanmar in July.

Rio Tinto, one of the biggest and best regarded mining
companies in the world, now joins the hall of mining shame.

But Juukan Gorge may prove to be a watershed moment for the
sector.

WIELDING THE ESG SWORD

Rio's initial reaction to the furore over its destruction of
46,000-year old cultural heritage sites was a carefully-worded
apology and the docking of executive bonuses. This has been the
mining industry's stock response to past failings.

This time, though, it didn't work.

Rio's board seemed sublimely unaware of how its actions
might reverberate in a societal cauldron of ethnic and racial
tension. It was Rio's own shareholders who put them right and
told them they had to live up to their ESG (environmental,
social and governance) promises.

The ESG sword has now claimed the sacrificial heads of Rio's
chief executive Jean-Sébastien Jacques, as well as the heads of
iron ore and corporate relations.

This is the management team that delivered total returns of
183% and 229% to London and Australian shareholders respectively
over Jacques' four-year tenure.

The activist funds that led the attack are clearly
signalling that failing on sustainability metrics is now more
important than winning on the financial ones.

In doing so, they have dispelled any notion that ESG is just
a box-ticking exercise wrapped up in glossy public relations.

Indeed, ESG is now impacting mining corporates down credit
channels as well.

In response to Norilsk's Arctic spill Fitch Ratings raised
its "ecological impacts" assessment, part of an ESG weighting
that feeds into the company's default long-term credit rating.

Fitch is concerned about both the potential for a $2.1
billion damages claim by the Russian authorities and the much
higher costs of protecting structures from a melting Arctic
permafrost.

Credit and shareholders are a powerful combination of ESG
levers on mining companies.

UNDER THE SPOTLIGHT

The ESG tide is washing across every economic sector but the
mining sector has rapidly moved centre stage.

A new generation of metals users, companies such as Apple
and Tesla, are insisting their suppliers must be as ESG
compliant as possible.

Growing consumer awareness of metal supply chains is being
replicated at government level, particularly in Europe where
policy-makers are pushing for "green" metals to supply the
region's green industrial strategy.

The mining industry is still adjusting to this new scrutiny.

There are plenty of positive developments.

Indian aluminium producer Hindalco, for example,
has solved the tailings dam problem by redesigning its alumina
refining process to produce a waste that can be used by the
cement and construction sectors. Three of its four plants now
generate no "red mud" residue.

Major miners operating in the Congo are now moving to
embrace the artisanal mining sector. Glencore's
decision to join the Fair Cobalt Alliance marks, it said, an
evolution in "our approach" as to how artisanal and large-scale
mining "can sustainably co-exist as distinct yet complementary
sectors of a successful mining industry."

Unfortunately, as the Juukan Gorge episode shows, it is the
failures not the successes against which the mining industry
will be judged.

And the failures tend to be truly ugly, witness last year's
catastrophic dam failure at Vale's Brumadinho iron ore mine in
Brazil.

FAILURE IS NOT AN OPTION

Mining companies such as Rio have now been given notice that
shareholders expect a zero-failure operational model similar to
that applying in industries such as nuclear.

Consider the findings of the Rio board review into why an
ancient cultural heritage site was sacrificed for a bit more
iron ore.

"It was the result of a series of decisions, actions and
omissions over an extended period of time, underpinned by flaws
in systems, data sharing, engagement within the company and with
the (indigenous owners) PKKP, and poor decision-making."

How would we feel if Rio were a nuclear plant operator?

Quite evidently, something needs to change at the company.

The Australian media are calling for an Australian as the
next CEO, arguing that a native would have a better intuitive
cultural understanding of sites such as Juukan Gorge.

That may be missing the point. As my colleague Clyde Russell
argues, it's the very composition of the board that is the
problem.

Quant-driven geologists, extractive industry experts and
investment managers are an unlikely group of people to handle
well the soft skills essential to the S part of the ESG.

Moreover, the challenges of putting an industry with as
dirty and dangerous a legacy as mining on an
environmentally-friendly, socially-positive and zero-carbon
footing are myriad and multiplying.

Rio and other major mining companies have global foot-prints
with localised ESG risk of failure.

The sheer complexity of ESG needs a separate operational
function with local roots and direct representation at the head.
A company like Rio needs powerful ESG board representation.

After all, if one bad ESG call can unleash such a fire storm
of social anger and bring about the downfall of three top
executives, why isn't the board including sustainability in
every discussion?

Rio's self-inflicted misery, though, is a wake-up call for
everyone else.

Investors like the long-term mining story, a low-carbon
future of metal-hungry electric cars and renewable energy
generation.

But they are also clear that mining companies need to be
truly green if they are going to be the winners of this green
revolution.

The ESG sword has been wielded with shocking effect. It
remains unsheathed, ready for its next negligent victim.
(Editing by Jane Merriman)

More News
1 Dec 2023 11:50

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Miners lead FTSE 100 higher on Chinese data

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were higher at midday Friday, putting investors in a good mood as we enter the final month of the year.

Read more
1 Dec 2023 08:52

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Miners give FTSE 100 boost thanks to China PMI

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened higher on Friday, with the FTSE 100 boosted by mining stocks.

Read more
27 Nov 2023 17:08

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Downbeat China data hurts exposed FTSE 100 stocks

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed down on Monday, as underwhelming industrial data from China hurt Asia-exposed stocks and oil majors, while new homes figures in the US also disappointed.

Read more
27 Nov 2023 11:58

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Downbeat China headlines hurt FTSE 100

(Alliance News) - London's FTSE 100 made an uncertain start to the week, with share price falls for miners, oil majors and China-exposed stocks sending the large-cap benchmark into the red heading into Monday afternoon.

Read more
27 Nov 2023 08:49

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Rightmove shines despite UK housing market strife

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened mixed on Monday, while the pound continued its ascent, as the expectation that US interest rates have peaked continues to put pressure on the dollar.

Read more
22 Nov 2023 09:09

IN BRIEF: Rio Tinto to pay USD28 million penalty for Coal Mozambique

Rio Tinto PLC - London-based miner - Reaches court-approved settlement with US Securities & Exchange Commission of a law suit brought by the regulator in 2017 concerning disclosure in Rio's 2012 annual accounts. Rio will pay a USD28 million penalty, while its former chief executive Tom Albanese, will pay USD50,000. The SEC charges related to the impairment of Rio Tinto Coal Mozambique in the 2012 accounts. Rio had bought RTCM in 2011 and sold it in 2014. Neither Rio nor Albanese admit to the SEC's charges, and the company says it welcomes closure of the case "on appropriate and reasonable terms".

Read more
22 Nov 2023 08:04

Rio Tinto to pay $28m to settle SEC suit over Mozambique writedown

(Sharecast News) - Rio Tinto said on Wednesday that it has agreed to pay the US Securities and Exchange Commission $28m to settle a 2017 lawsuit related to the disclosure of the impairment of Rio Tinto Coal Mozambique (RTCM) in its 2012 year-end accounts.

Read more
22 Nov 2023 07:47

LONDON BRIEFING: SigmaRoc signs USD1 billion deal for CRH lime assets

(Alliance News) - Stocks are expected to edge higher at Wednesday's market open in London, as investors look ahead to the latest fiscal announcements from the UK government.

Read more
15 Nov 2023 16:59

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Investors see end of sky-high rates in sight

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed higher on Wednesday, with a pair of cooler inflation readings from either side of the Atlantic lifting spirits and driving largely broad-based gains in equities.

Read more
3 Nov 2023 10:17

IN BRIEF: Greatland says phase one drilling finished at Paterson South

Greatland Gold PLC - Western Australia-focused exploration and development company - Says phase one of drilling campaign at Paterson South in Western Australia has been completed. Under a farm-in and joint-venture deal announced in May, Greatland Gold is entitled to a 75% interest in Rio Tinto Exploration Pty Ltd's 100% owned Paterson South project. Says drilling "effectively tested" the magnetic source of the Stingray and Decka targets, with assay results showing "moderately anomalous" gold and copper in various intervals.

Read more
25 Oct 2023 17:07

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: FTSE 100 fights off early losses in mixed trading

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed mixed on Wednesday, as concerns over monetary policy and developments in the Middle East lingered.

Read more
24 Oct 2023 17:08

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: FTSE 100 shakes off midday losses after US data

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 closed in the green on Tuesday following positive private sector data out of the US, despite figures closer to home showing a weaker UK private sector and rising unemployment.

Read more
24 Oct 2023 09:29

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Barclays ups Rio Tinto; Liberum likes Indivior

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Tuesday morning and Monday:

Read more
24 Oct 2023 07:55

LONDON BRIEFING: Barclays quarterly income rises, but profit falls

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are expected to edge into the red on Tuesday, as investors look ahead to the latest series of flash PMI prints from major economies.

Read more
24 Oct 2023 07:41

Barclays upgrades Rio Tinto on improving iron ore outlook

(Sharecast News) - Barclays has upgraded mining group Rio Tinto from 'neutral' to 'overweight' after taking a more positive view on iron ore.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.