Norway’s $1trn wealth fund builds Rio Tinto stake

By Daniel Brightmore
Rio Tinto was frozen out for over a decade for owning a polluting copper mine, but Norway’s sovereign wealth fund has brought the company back into it...

Rio Tinto was frozen out for over a decade for owning a polluting copper mine, but Norway’s sovereign wealth fund has brought the company back into its fold, reports Bloomberg.

Norway’s $1trn wealth fund built a 1.4% stake in the world’s No. 2 miner by the end of September, according to Bloomberg data. That puts the fund among the top 10 holders of Rio Tinto shares, the data show.

The investment demonstrates the value of meeting the increasingly aggressive environmental goals set by some of the largest money managers. Norway’s wealth fund is at the forefront of those efforts, and said earlier this year it would stop investing in companies that mine more than 20 million tons a year of thermal coal, the most polluting fuel. Miners including Glencore Plc and Anglo American Plc are set to fall foul of this rule.

SEE ALSO:

Pindan awarded $90mn Rio Tinto camp construction contract

Rio Tinto and China Baouw partner to boost environmental performance

Rio Tinto awards $41mn Koodaideri contracts to Aboriginal businesses

Read the latest issue of Mining Global here

Norway refused to buy Rio Tinto stock for more than a decade because of the environmental damage caused by its Grasberg mine in Indonesia (pictured), one of the world’s biggest copper and gold projects. In June, the fund said it had revoked that exclusion, after a recommendation from its Council on Ethics.

Rio agreed to sell its stake in Grasberg last year for $3.5bn. The mine, operated by U.S. company Freeport-McMoRan Inc., is highly contentious. Every year it dumps tens of millions of tons of mining waste into an Indonesian river system and will continue to do so for years to come.

Rio has sought to burnish its environmental credentials, becoming increasingly vocal on the subject. After offloading its last coal mine in 2018, the company has sought to distinguish itself from rivals that still have fossil-fuel exposure.

Share

Featured Articles

BHP $38bn Anglo-American bid is 'all About Copper'

BHP Group's bid for DeBeers owners Anglo American would create a copper mining group with around 10% of global output

GEM: Non-China Coal Power Sees First Growth Since 2019

Global Energy Monitor 2024 global coal Tracker shows less coal-power capacity was retired in 2023 than for a decade but that trend will be 'short lived'

Biden Ruling 'Threat to US Critical Minerals Mining'

The Essential Minerals Association says Biden's Public Lands Rule is threat to critical minerals mining industry and compromises move to clean energy

Thermo Fisher Scientific Tackling Lithium eco Issue

Sustainability

EC on Importance of Minerals Security Partnership Forum

Sustainability

EU & US form Critical Minerals Security Partnership Forum

Sustainability