BHP plans to keep remaining coal after completing mine sales
06 Oct 2023
BHP Group Ltd., the world’s biggest miner, plans to keep its
remaining metallurgical coal assets after completing an existing sale process,
pointing to a strong outlook for higher-quality raw materials.
Efforts to divest
BHP’s interests in the Daunia and Blackwater sites in Queensland are ongoing,
chief development officer Johan van Jaarsveld told reporters Thursday in
Melbourne. BHP co-owns the operations in a joint venture with Mitsubishi Corp.,
and its stakes are worth about $4.2 billion, according to Liberum Capital Ltd.
“The assets that are left are the best met coal assets in the
world, and also the closest to China,” van Jaarsveld said. “We review it
annually, but as it currently stands we do not have plans to sell more.” BHP’s
joint venture holds stakes in five other Queensland operations, while the
producer intends to run its last thermal coal mine until a planned closure around
2030.
Steelmakers
globally are attempting to curb greenhouse gas emissions and to ultimately
substitute the use of metallurgical coal by switching to a cleaner process,
though they expect the commodity to have a key role for several decades longer.
“As it stands, we
think hard, high-quality coking coal is a great market and see great prospects
for that commodity,” van Jaarsveld said.
BHP completed the
$6 billion takeover of OZ Minerals Ltd. this year to add key copper and nickel
assets in Australia, though it is reviewing the future of other operations in
Brazil. “They are not on the market, though they are small assets for BHP,” he
said.
The company
remains cautious on the prospects for further major acquisitions and sees
better potential to generate value by improving existing operations and through
exploration.
“It’s exciting
when you can get there, though you absolutely have to stay disciplined,” van
Jaarsveld said on potential acquisitions. “Like all companies worth our salt we
have a team and we know what we like to look at.”