BHP Minerals Australia President, Mike Henry, has outlined plans to grow value and improve returns on capital across the company’s Australian operations. Speaking to investors and analysts at a briefing in Adelaide, Henry said BHP’s large, long-life, low-cost Australian assets underpin current margins and future optionality. “The quality, scale, concentration and location of our assets support improvement initiatives, compelling latent capacity options, efficient technology deployment and attractive investment opportunities.”
He added: “By sharing knowledge and replicating best practice across our global portfolio, we’ve been able to substantially reduce unit costs at our Australian mining operations over the last five years. But we have further to go. We can make ourselves safer and even more productive, and expect to lower our unit costs by a further 10% over the medium-term. Through strengthening our maintenance capability and processes, including by bringing in expertise from other industries, and through better leveraging technology, our global Maintenance Centre of Excellence is enabling a step-change in maintenance performance across BHP. With our global technology initiatives and asset-level programs to unlock resources and lower costs, we expect our Australian mining operations to deliver $1.6 billion of additional productivity gains over the next two years.”
“We also have a suite of attractive medium-term investment opportunities. While these remain subject to our strict Group-level capital allocation framework tests, with average returns potentially exceeding 40%, they are well placed to compete for capital.” Henry highlighted the Brownfield Expansion option (BFX) at Olympic Dam as an example of a project with the potential to deliver sustainable returns to shareholders, government and the local community. Also speaking at the briefing, Olympic Dam Asset President Jacqui McGill, said the BFX option could provide a capital efficient path to increased capacity through accelerated development into the Southern Mine Area.
“As we move into the Southern Mine Area we expect to see the copper grade increase to 3% by financial year 2023, which we believe would coincide with a structural deficit in the copper market. If approved, the BFX option could lift production capacity to 330,000 t/y and move Olympic Dam into the first quartile of the cost curve, which is where we strive to be with all our assets at BHP. Any investment however, must compete for capital against all other options, including returns to shareholders.”
McGill also outlined longer-term development options that had the potential to significantly increase the volume of copper produced, including the use of heap leach technology. Combined, these plans create significant value and support improved returns both at Olympic Dam and across BHP’s minerals operations in Australia.