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    Glencore going green. The tide is turning!

    Glencore to abandon large coal acquisitions, freeze production over investor climate change concerns
    Glencore chief executive officer Ivan Glasenberg. Picture: Supplied

    Australia’s largest coal producer, Glencore, will abandon the pursuit of large coal acquisitions and freeze production at current levels to help address climate change concerns following pressure from investors including major Australian superannuation funds for the fossil fuel to be phased out.

    The Swiss-based resources giant, headed by billionaire Ivan Glasenberg, says it will cap its global thermal and coking coal production at the current level of about 145 million tonnes after holding talks with the Climate Action 100+ initiative which controls $US32 trillion ($45tn) in global investment. Glencore’s Australian mines account for nearly 100m tonnes of its global volumes, underlining the impact it may have on major new mines being delivered in Queensland and NSW.

    Climate Action 100+ members in Australia include AustralianSuper, AMP Capital, Cbus, IFM Investors, QSuper and BT Financial Group.

    “To deliver a strong investment case to our shareholders, we must invest in assets that will be resilient to regulatory, physical and operational risks related to climate change,” Glencore said in a statement today.

    “To meet the growing needs of a lower carbon economy, Glencore aims to prioritise its capital investment to grow production of commodities essential to the energy and mobility transition and to limit its coal production capacity broadly to current levels.”

    The plan to effectively end the pursuit of new coal mines by one of the world’s top producers signals a broader rethink among miners over their future exposure to the highly polluting fossil fuel.

    While Glencore said it will retain the right to buy minority stakes in its existing operations, the move will likely ensure projects such as its giant Wandoan thermal coal project in Queensland are put permanently on ice.

    Glencore said it will “rebalance its portfolio” towards commodities that support the transition to a low-carbon economy in a move it expects will lower so-called Scope 3 emissions which covers customers end use of the commodities produced by the company.

    The miner’s new stance on coal and its impact on global emissions marks a dramatic shift less than a year after it paid Rio Tinto $US1.7 billion ($2.4bn) for the Hail Creek coking coal mine in Queensland. It also paid US$1.26bn for a 49 per cent share of Rio’s Coal & Allied thermal coal operations in NSW’s Hunter Valley the previous year.

    Rio chairman Simon Thompson subsequently linked the company’s exit from NSW thermal coal mines to climate change concerns, saying the decision was influenced by the implications of climate change on coal supply and demand and because it had better investment options in iron ore and copper.

    Coal prices have performed strongly since Glencore bought the mines at prices generally seen at the time as fully valued.

    The company holds a bullish view on coal markets and was happy to buy as Rio made a decision to exit.

    However, investors are increasingly banding together to question the longevity of thermal coal in particular as cleaner renewable energy sources provide an alternative power supply option.

    In Australia, coal recently pipped iron ore as the country’s largest export earner. Australia exported $66.2 billion worth of thermal and coking coal last year, the highest amount ever recorded, due in large part due to soaring coal prices.

    However, new mines face a much tougher test to receive regulatory approvals due to community and investor concern over environmental impacts and the threat of new coal facilities becoming stranded assets in the face of cheaper clean alternatives.

    The NSW Land and Environment Court earlier this month upheld a decision by the NSW government to block the development of Gloucester Coal’s proposed Rocky Hill coking coal mine, with judge Brian Preston citing the mine’s potential contribution to climate change as a reason for the decision.

    Meanwhile, Adani has hit a last minute hurdle in its attempt to start work at its controversial Carmichael coal mine in Queensland’s Galilee Basin due to environmental concerns over the project’s impact on the endangered black-throated finch.
 
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