LONDON, UK -- A beleaguered Rio Tinto board defended itself from criticisms coming from a number of shareholders at the company’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) last Wednesday, Apr. 15, 2009, in London, England. High on shareholders' minds was the proposed $19.5 billion deal to sell access to a number of key company assets, including Kennecott Minerals, to the Chinese government-owned Chinalco as part of what many speakers described as offensive to existing shareholders and a direct result of poor investment and management decisions made by the company over the last several years.
At the meeting, Lutheran pastor Jon Magnuson, from Marquette, presented a document signed by one hundred faith leaders of ten faith traditions in Marquette, Baraga and Keweenaw counties. Magnuson said that the document was part of a petition that collected roughly ten thousand citizens' names in opposition to Rio Tinto’s Eagle Project nickel and copper mine, located on the Yellow Dog Plains in Marquette County.
"Many of our parishioners and members of our faith communities are . . . involved in the mining industry," said Magnuson. "But on this particular project we have taken a very strong position -- in this place, at this time, for these specific reasons. And one is the massive environmental damage that is threatened to the Great Lakes; and the second and most prominent concern is that what we perceive and experience is a cavalier dismissal of the claims of one of the major Indian tribes in Michigan, the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community."*
In response, company CEO Tom Albanese said that Rio Tinto is "not unmindful of the questions and the controversy" and claimed that Rio Tinto Copper CEO Bret Clayton "visited the site and met with a number of the stakeholders as a result of requests of some of the questions that came up in last year’s AGM."
While Clayton did visit with a number of parties sympathetic to the mine’s development, including the local Chamber of Commerce and various local politicians, he made no attempt to meet with tribal representatives or with other Michigan citizens opposed to the mine.
Eagle Project's unsafe crown pillar design noted at meeting
Gabriel Caplett from Skandia, Mich., spoke to a lack of competence and care in designing the Eagle Project mine.
"I’m just wondering if other shareholders are curious as to why this project hasn’t been brought on line yet and I think there’s a very simple reason for that and it lies within the mine design itself," said Caplett. "The mine as designed could be charged with fraud under Michigan’s metallic mining law. The mine, as designed, would collapse -- the crown pillar holding up the mine ceiling would collapse. Many technical experts have agreed on that."
Caplett explained that Dr. David Sainsbury, a rock mechanics expert hired by the State of Michigan to review the mine’s mine structure inquired with Rio Tinto if anyone at the company had rock mechanic’s expertise.
"He didn’t receive a response" said Caplett.
Sainsbury, who was transferred to work overseas after continually reporting to the State that the company’s conclusions regarding the crown pillar’s stability were "not defensible," told a mine engineering colleague that the Eagle application, produced by Golder and Associates and Foth and VanDyke, was equivalent to "high school level" work.
Caplett asked the Rio Tinto board if, after deferring the Eagle Project mine, they would be willing to waste any more shareholder money on this project or would ultimately abandon it.
Rio Tinto shareholders note company's unethical practices
Two shareholders addressed concerns regarding Rio Tinto’s continued involvement in the controversial Grasberg Mine, in West Papua. According to shareholder Andrew Hickman, last year the government of Norway divested roughly $800 million in shares, calling the company’s record in West Papua "grossly unethical." Hickman said that mine officials have acknowledged paying the Indonesian military "less than" $1.6 million to guard the facility and repress local opposition to the mine.
Other shareholders addressed the recently acknowledged leakage of roughly one hundred thousand liters of contaminated tailings water at Rio Tinto’s Ranger uranium mine in Australia, as well as concerns regarding the company’s joint venture arrangement with Muriel Mining Co. in Colombia. The latter venture has forced the relocation of an indigenous community and occupied a sacred mountain.
The Reverend Magnuson and Caplett also met with representatives at the Church of England’s Pension Board and Ethical Investment Advisory Group and with the United Kingdom’s Department for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Review.
For photos and more information visit: http://riotintoagm2009.wordpress.com/.
* For video coverage of Rev. Magnuson speaking in London, click here.
Editor's Note: This press release courtesy Save the Wild UP. Read about the documentary film on the proposed Eagle Mine, to be shown at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Apr. 22 (Earth Day) in Fisher 135 on the Michigan Tech campus. The film will be followed by a panel discussion / question-answer session with scientists and activists.
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