The world’s second largest miner Rio Tinto (ASX, LON, NYSE: RIO) has scored a major win in Mongolia after the country’s parliament unanimously approved a resolution that reconfirms the validity of all the Oyu Tolgoi mine-related agreements approved since 2009.
The legislators’ resolution brings an 18-month review on the deals governing the copper-gold mine to a close, allowing the company to continue with an ongoing $7 billion expansion of the operation.
The news is something of a relief for Rio Tinto, which feared the government might try to completely renegotiate the agreements on the asset’s development — a 2009 investment agreement, a 2011 amended and restated shareholder agreement and a 2015 underground mine development and financing plan.
The resolution, however, recommends to explore options to improve
the deal, including looking at the Mongolian government’s equity share in Oyu
Tolgoi, a re-definition of the reserve report and updated feasibility report,
and a renewal of environmental and water assessments.
“Adherence to these agreements by all parties has underpinned a total in-country spend of around $10 billion since 2010,” Rio Tinto’s chief executive copper and diamonds, Arnaud Soirat, said in the statement.
Soirat acknowledged there was still “a lot of work to do” to
ensure Oyu Tolgoi reaches its full potential.
Oyu Tolgoi was discovered in 2001 and Rio gained
control of it in 2012. The ongoing mine expansion is expected to lift
production from 125–150kt this year to 560kt at full tilt from 2025, making it
the biggest new copper mine to come on stream in several years.
The giant operation is one-third owned by Mongolia’s
government and two-third held by Canada’s Turquoise Hill Resources (TSX,
NYSE:TRQ). Out of Turquoise’s 66% share, Rio owns 51% in the project.