BHP’s Mt. Arthur bind illustrates mining’s coal dilemma
Saturday, May 1, 2021 - 13:35:48
Mining.com

The world’s largest miner has been in talks with stakeholders on its plans to divest the Mt. Arthur thermal coal mine, its stake in a steel-making coal project with Japan’s Mitsui and a stake in a thermal coal mine in Colombia.

Some large shareholders are pushing the miner to exit immediately while other investors want a slower exit, to ensure the mine is wound down responsibly.

How BHP, which faces about $1 billion in clean up costs at Mt. Arthur alone, divests could be a template for other miners, including Glencore Plc and Anglo American who are also mulling ways to offload coal assets.

BHP spin-off South32 agreed this month to pay up to A$250 million ($194.70 million) to smooth the sale of its South African thermal coal business, partly funding environmental clean-up costs over a decade.

“The best thing that BHP could do is set a global precedent about how to exit responsibly,” said Tim Buckley, director of Austrian think tank Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA).

BHP said that it had rehabilitated more than 1,211 hectares already at Mt. Arthur and that transparency was “fundamentally important” to any mine rehabilitation. It said it could not speculate on the outcome of any potential divestment of the Mt. Arthur asset.

BHP’s exit from thermal coal would satisfy investment criteria laid down by Norway’s government pension fund, which owns about 5.58% of BHP’s London-listed arm.

It put BHP under observation for possible exclusion if it did not address its use or production of coal last year before raising its stake after BHP announced divestment plans.

The Norwegian wealth fund declined comment.

Mining license set to expire

Shareholder proposals that press companies to exit from fossil fuels without taking into account rehabilitation needs do not solve the problem, said Alison George at investment advisor Regnan, part of the Pendal Group which manages about A$97.4 billion.

“We have been concerned that (the proposals) really aren’t well targeted to address the system risk nor are they really likely to get the company to manage that risk better,” she said.

BHP is considering smaller buyers and splitting the assets, with bids due in the next few weeks, said a banker familiar with the matter who declined to be identified as the information is not public.

While it would be a coup for a small company, BHP prefers a buyer that can sustain long term responsibilities, the banker added.

In 2016, Rio Tinto sold its Blair Athol mine in Queensland to coal junior Terracom for A$1 along with providing a rehabilitation fund of A$80 million.

The fund now stands at about A$50 million after the state government trimmed its rehabilitation requirements at Terracom’s request and allowed Terracom to draw down A$27 million in exchange for an insurer’s guarantee.

One stumbling block to a sale has been the expiration of BHP’s mining licence, set for June 2026. BHP said in March it will apply to extend operations to 2045.

The miner wrote down its Mt. Arthur coal business by $1.2 billion this year and took a smaller write-down on its Colombia coal asset, Cerrejon.

A listing may also not garner the value that BHP desires, with recent coal IPOs attracting tepid demand in Australia. RBC recently valued any spin-off at $2.7 billion.

As part of any spin off, think tank IEEFA has proposed BHP set up a $1 billion sinking fund to cover future rehabilitation liabilities.

That would see BHP maintain a controlling minority stake to prevent vulture funds stripping the fund or cashflow and with capital invested to reward shareholders with dividends and any land resale.

One institutional investor, who has been approached about the proposal via a third party, said the model carried high risk because it was untested and may not offer the security of returns his organization was looking for.

The competing shareholder pressures add to BHP’s coal headaches for a business that has become problematic for miners amid action by environmental activists and with banks and insurers scaling back financing because of global warming concerns.

“The question is, how do you ensure the clean up of the mess that you have created in a socially responsible way?” said IEEFA director Buckley.


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