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UPDATE 1-In Arizona, Rio Tinto CEO seeks 'win-win' for Resolution copper project

Wed, 29th Sep 2021 21:26

(Adds details from interview)

By Ernest Scheyder

Sept 29 (Reuters) - A key Native American leader in Arizona
declined to meet Rio Tinto Plc's chief executive
this week, the latest roadblock in the mining giant's search for
a "win-win" compromise to build its controversial Resolution
Copper project.

The visit from Rio's Jakob Stausholm to the state
underscores Resolution's importance to the Anglo-Australian
company, which has spent more than $2 billion on the project in
the past decade but has yet to produce any copper, the red metal
used in electric vehicles and other electronics.

Rio hopes the mine will eventually produce more than 40
billion pounds of copper. First, it must win approval from the
San Carlos Apache tribe, an unlikely prospect as Chairman Terry
Rambler and other tribal leaders have long signaled that their
opposition centers on religious concerns and cannot be assuaged
by economic incentives.

Stausholm, in his first visit to Arizona since becoming CEO
in January, said he is hopeful the two sides can reach an
agreement that will allow the project to go ahead.

"We're trying to find a win-win. I do think that's in
everyone's interest. But I reckon that we still have work to
do," Stausholm told Reuters in a video interview on Wednesday
from Phoenix, the state's capital.

"If we haven't explained ourselves well enough, then we need
to explain ourselves better."

The complex debate is a harbinger of land battles to come as
the United States aims to build more EVs, which use twice as
much copper as vehicles with internal combustion engines. The
Resolution mine could meet about 25% of projected U.S. demand
for the metal.

The Arizona dispute centers on Oak Flat Campground, which
the San Carlos Apache consider home to deities. The underground
mine would cause a crater that would swallow the site.

U.S. President Joe Biden - who received a critical
endorsement from the San Carlos Apache during his presidential
bid - put the project temporarily on hold in March.

A bill under consideration in the U.S. Congress would undo
2014 legislation that approved a land transfer to give Rio
access to the copper deposit.

Stausholm said he tried unsuccessfully to meet with Rambler
during his Arizona visit. Rambler told Reuters he would rather
spend his time lobbying Congress to block the land transfer.

"If they wanted to meet they should have met way before
anything was done" in 2014, Rambler said. "My focus now is on
changing that law."

WHEN TO TALK?

The two sides disagree about how and when to negotiate.
Whereas Rambler and other Native American leaders said the
proper time for consultation was in 2014, Stausholm said he sees
that process just beginning.

"You can only get communities comfortable if they really
understand, if they feel we're transparent," said Stausholm, an
accountant by training from Denmark who previously worked for
shipping giant Maersk and Royal Dutch Shell
.

Stausholm declined to say whether Rio could eventually walk
away from the project, though he acknowledged the company wants
tribal consent.

"The first stage is dialogue, and that's why I'm putting
myself here in Arizona," he said. "You can't conclude anything
at this point in time."

Stausholm hinted that changes were possible to the mine's
design plan that might make it palatable to Native Americans,
though he declined to be specific. "We have to get through the
dialogue and find out what the pressure points are," he said.

Stausholm added that Rio would smelt any copper produced at
the mine inside the United States. Opponents have said they fear
Rio would export the copper for use by China or another nation.

BHP, which is a minority partner in the project,
was not immediately available to comment.

(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder in Houston; additional reporting
by Clara Denina in London and Melanie Burton in Melbourne;
Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

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