
Ажиллах хүчээ бууруулж байгаад хувьцаа эзэмшигчид таатай бус байгаа ч ногдол ашгийн хувьд үр өгөөжтэй хэвээр байх болно гэв. Гэсэн хэдий ч 2013 оны зардалын төлөвлөгөөгөө баталсан гэдгээ ч мэдэгдэв.
Мэдэгдэлийнхээ төгсгөлд тэрээр, Монгол Хятадын засгийн газрын хоорондын Оюу толгой төслийн эрчим хүчний асуудалд тодорхой шийдэлд хүрээгүй байгаа ч нааштай тохихролцоонд хүрнэ гэдэгт итгэж байгаагаа илэрхийлжээ.
RIO CHIEF WARNS OF JOB CUTS
RIO Tinto will increase its global cost-cutting drive and
reduce spending on new projects, as the pace of the slowdown in China continues
to surprise the resource industry.
Speaking in London last night, Rio chief executive Tom Albanese said he was now
more cautious on Chinese demand for bulk commodities than he was ”a couple of
months ago”, with economic growth in the Middle Kingdom now tipped to slip
below 8 per cent.
Rio has already cut $US500 million from its cost base this year, including
hundreds of Australian jobs, and Mr Albanese indicated his razor gang had more
work ahead.
”So far we’ve already hit $US500 million of annualised savings … and are
planning further significant reductions in operating, evaluation and sustaining
capital spend,” he said.
”That will involve reductions in employment levels.”
Mr Albanese would not say how many jobs were likely to go, nor which part of
the company’s global operations were likely to bear the brunt.
But he was more candid on the company’s capital expenditure forecasts,
confirming that plans to spend $US14 billion in 2013 were likely to be scaled
back.
”Following the review of capex we are expecting to materially reduce our
forecast capex over the next few years,” he said.
”New projects are coming under even greater scrutiny and I would not expect any
major new project approvals in the near-term.”
Mr Albanese indicated that plans to expand its coal exports from Mozambique
were likely to be deferred, but the company remained committed to existing
schedules for developing the Simandou iron ore asset in Guinea.
Mr Albanese said plans to expand the company’s flagship iron ore assets in
Western Australia also remained unaffected.
He confirmed that Chinese and Mongolian governments had still not reached a
deal for electricity to be imported from China to power Rio’s Oyu Tolgoi mine
in southern Mongolia, but said there was now ”real momentum” in the
negotiations.
But shareholders are unlikely to share the pain being felt by Rio’s workforce,
with Mr Albanese saying he remained committed to the company’s progressive
dividend policy, which effectively ensures dividends can never reduce
year-on-year.
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