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BHP signals shift away from coal as profits dip
by Staff Writers
Sydney (AFP) Aug 17, 2020

Mining giant BHP said profits fell four percent in the year ending in June, as the Anglo-Australian firm signalled a transition away from the intensely polluting thermal coal market on Tuesday.

The company reported annual net profit of just under US$8 billion, versus US$8.3 billion in the year before.

Recently installed chief executive Mike Henry noted a "year marked by the challenges" linked to civil unrest in Chile -- the world's largest producer of copper -- and the coronavirus pandemic.

Henry also predicted a rocky path ahead.

"We expect most major economies will contract heavily in 2020, China being the exception," he said.

The company also confirmed a long-hinted shift away from the coal-for-electricity market.

"To further enhance our portfolio for value, risk and returns, we intend to concentrate our coal portfolio on higher quality coking coals," the company said in a statement.

BHP added that it was "looking at options to exit" two thermal coal projects in Australia and one in Colombia.

Coking coal is primarily used to make iron and steel and has not been the primary focus of the effort to reduce the impacts of climate change.

BHP's own operational greenhouse gas emissions again rose.

Rivals Rio Tinto and Anglo-American have announced similar shifts away from thermal coal.

Henry, a long-time employee, was tapped to take over the top job from January 1, 2020.

A Canadian, he joined the global resources company in 2003 and led its Australia minerals operations since 2016.


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To end King Coal's reign, must his most loyal subjects get paid
Brighton UK (SPX) Aug 03, 2020
The huge task of phasing out coal requires a detailed roadmap to sequence coal plant retirement with a range of policy instruments and support for key stakeholders which will expand current notions of a just transition, leading energy experts have said. Governments should be prepared to pay billions of pounds to operators of coal-fired power plants in agreements to shut down their plants early, a new paper published in Nature Climate Change today recommends. The paper recommends extensive co ... read more

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