Exchange release
30 October 2024
BHP Annual General Meeting 2024 addresses
BHP's Annual General Meeting of BHP Group Limited will
be held in Brisbane, Australia today.
The CEO and Chair addresses that will be delivered at
the meeting are attached.
Authorised for release by Stefanie Wilkinson, Group
General Counsel and Group Company Secretary.
Contacts
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Media
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Investor Relations
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Australia and
Asia
Josie Brophy
+61 417 622 839
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Australia and
Asia
John-Paul Santamaria
+61 499 006 018
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Europe, Middle East and Africa
Gabrielle Notley
+61 411 071 715
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Europe, Middle East and Africa
James Bell
+44 7961 636 432
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Americas
Renata Fernandez
+56 9 8229 5357
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Americas
Monica Nettleton
+1 (416) 518-6293
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BHP
Group Limited
ABN 49 004 028 077
LEI WZE1WSENV6JSZFK0JC28
Registered in Australia
Level 18, 171 Collins Street
Melbourne
Victoria 3000 Australia
Tel: +61 1300 55 4757 Fax: +61 3 9609 3015
BHP Group is headquartered in Australia
bhp.com
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BHP Group Limited AGM
30 October 2024
Ken Mackenzie, Chair
Welcome to everyone with us here today in Queensland
and watching the webcast online.
We are proud to have around 100,000 shareholders in
Queensland who hold over 170 million shares and it is good to have
so many of you joining us today.
Of course, Queensland is also home to around 10,000
BHP employees and contractors, as well as our partnership with
Mitsubishi in the BMA joint venture.
BMA is a great business and Queenslanders can be
proud of the high quality steelmaking coal it produces for
customers in India, Japan, South Korea and China.
Ladies and gentlemen, it is a privilege to be here to
address you as the Chair of BHP.
I have chaired several BHP Annual General Meetings
now.
In different cities...
In-person and online through COVID....
I am always left energised by your passion for - and
interest in - the company.
Stewarding BHP is an honour that your Board and I,
and our executive leaders, take extremely seriously.
We understand that it is the combination of
outstanding people, world class assets and execution excellence
that gives BHP the opportunity to create long term value for our
shareholders and for the communities in which we all live.
In these areas, we believe your company continues to
set itself apart. We hope you are all as confident and excited
about the future for BHP as we are.
Financial year 2024 was a strong one for BHP. We
performed well financially and made solid progress on our social
value targets and goals.
We showed - once again - that the consistent
execution of our clear and simple strategy delivers results.
And BHP is well positioned to continue to create
value today, and for decades to come.
I would like to take this opportunity to explain why,
focusing on four fundamentals:
· A safe,
inclusive and productive workplace culture
· A
portfolio of world class assets in attractive commodities
·
Disciplined capital allocation, and
· The
creation of social value
Safe, inclusive and productive
workplaces
I want to start with safety.
In January, a team member with one of our contracting
partners here in Queensland lost his life at work.
Luke O'Brien's death was a tragedy. Our thoughts
remain with his family and colleagues at BMA.
We must eliminate fatalities and serious injuries
from BHP.
Nothing matters more than safety.
Further, we remain determined to eliminate sexual
harassment, racism and bullying in our workplace. We know diverse
and inclusive teams are safer and more productive and that's why we
are working to make BHP a place where everyone can bring the best
of themselves to work.
The Board saw this spirit firsthand when we visited
our Potash Project in Saskatchewan, Canada earlier this year. Our
Jansen workforce showed a deep value in keeping each other
safe.
A global portfolio
positioned for success
Jansen is a project of enormous scale and ambition,
and it's a great example of how we're positioning our global
portfolio for success - success in a world that is increasingly
volatile.
Over the past year, the world has experienced:
· Ongoing
humanitarian crises in the Middle East, Ukraine and Sudan
· Threats
to the continued expansion of global trade by a new wave of
protectionism
· And a
range of consequential elections across the globe that are
reshaping the policy landscape.
In our operations, we are also seeing the lagging
effects of inflation, uneven recovery in China and supply side
surpluses for some commodities which is contributing to price
volatility.
We faced these challenges earlier in the year when we
made the tough but necessary decision to place our Nickel West
operations and West Musgrave project into temporary suspension.
In our view, the best way to create enduring value
for shareholders amid all this turbulence is to hold a mix of high
quality, resilient assets, and to run them exceptionally well.
I am optimistic about our ability to manage through
these challenges as the long-term fundamentals for the broader
resources sector remain strong.
Mining has an undeniable role to play in providing
the metals and minerals the world needs to continue to develop and
decarbonise. The global trends shaping our future are
interconnected, unstoppable, and bring with them new challenges and
opportunities for our sector.
That's why we have deliberately and methodically
reshaped our portfolio to increase our exposure to future facing
commodities and higher-quality steelmaking materials.
We have achieved a world-leading position in copper,
which is key to renewable energy, electric vehicles and,
increasingly, data centres.
We are developing a position in potash that will
contribute to food security and more sustainable land use to help
feed a global population that is expected to near 10 billion by
2050.
We have focused our steelmaking coal portfolio on
higher quality coals. These are preferred by our customers, who use
our steelmaking coal and iron ore to produce steel, which is needed
to build cities and infrastructure for decarbonisation.
And of course, our iron ore business is a critical
part of our future. We have extended our lead as the lowest cost
major iron ore producer globally and we continue to see
opportunities for greater efficiencies to unlock even more
value.
Today, we have a portfolio, and options for growth,
that leave us well positioned to provide the commodities the world
will need more of in the decades to come.
FY24
highlights
This augurs well for our future, but we have not lost
sight of value for today, as we continue to deliver strong earnings
and returns.
In the 2024 Financial Year, our Underlying EBITDA was
US$29 billion.
We continue to produce strong margins and a
consistently high baseline of cash flow.
In fact, this is the eighth consecutive year where we
have achieved a margin greater than 50 per cent and generated
average net operating cash flows of over US$20 billion per year.
This demonstrates the consistency of our earnings, despite the
cyclical volatility in the resources sector.
Now I am a firm believer in capital allocation
discipline as the backbone of a successful business, and many of
you will have heard Mike Henry and myself talk about BHP's Capital
Allocation Framework. This framework prioritises safety and
maintenance capital, balance sheet strength, and a minimum 50
percent payout ratio for dividends.
Accordingly, the Board has determined dividends
totalling US$7.4 billion to shareholders for the year.
Over the past 5 years, our total shareholder return
was approximately 15% per annum, and included delivering more than
US$50 billion in cash dividends to our shareholders.
This is more than any other miner in the world and is
testament to the durability of our portfolio and consistency of our
operational excellence.
Importantly, we are also creating significant
financial value in the communities in which we work and live.
In the 2024 Financial Year, our total global economic
contribution was over US$49.2 billion1. This included
US$25.3 billion2 with suppliers, US$11.2 billion in
payments to governments through income taxes, royalties and other
payments, and US$4.8 billion3 of wages, incentives and
benefits to our employees.
Delivering social
value
The value we create with our partners and
stakeholders is critical to our success - it's what we call social
value.
Social value means creating long term mutual benefit
for our people, partners, and local communities - and we have
formalised the way we deliver it through the BHP Social Value
Framework, which we launched in June 2022.
The framework is focused on six pillars:
decarbonisation, the environment, Indigenous partnerships, our
workforce, communities and responsible supply chains.
It supports progress towards real outcomes… Improved
access to employment and economic opportunities in host
communities… improved talent pipelines for the industry… increased
action on environmental issues and partnerships for mutual
benefit.
And this is a reinforcing loop. By setting goals and
holding ourselves to account, we push ourselves to get better every
year. This is designed to progressively create more social value,
build more trust and further strengthen relationships.
As a result, we can open doors to new opportunities
and partnerships, and increase our access to the best resources,
business partners, markets and talent.
One relevant and tangible example of social value in
action is our relationship with the Barada Barna people here in
Queensland.
Our relationships with Traditional Owners and other
Indigenous partners are some of the most important relationships we
have.
The BMA joint venture operates on the traditional
lands of the Barada Barna, and we have recently reached a new
Indigenous Land Use Agreement. For the Barada Barna, the Agreement
will deliver long-term benefits for the community through
investment in employment, education, business and contracting.
For BMA, it provides vital business certainty, and
will deepen our relationship with the Barada Barna people.
CTAP
Climate is another area we can make a difference,
while also growing long-term shareholder value. At our full year
results, we shared our latest Climate Transition Action Plan.
It reaffirms our commitment to play our part in the
global effort to address climate change and details our efforts
towards becoming a more sustainable and resilient business.
BHP has been setting and achieving targets for
operational greenhouse gas emissions since the 1990s.
We are on track to meet our operational greenhouse
gas emissions target of at least a 30 per cent reduction by 2030
against a 2020 baseline.
And we are developing pathways for our long-term goal
to achieve net zero operational greenhouse gas emissions by
2050.
Importantly, we continue to collaborate with
customers and suppliers to support their efforts to lower
greenhouse gas emissions in our value chain.
Since we released our plan in August, we have engaged
with many shareholders and stakeholders. We thank you for that
engagement and hope to secure your support for the plan when we get
to our Say on Climate
vote.
Samarco dam
failure
Last Friday we announced a final settlement agreement
in Brazil to resolve the key claims by the Brazilian public
authorities relating to Samarco's Fundão dam failure.
The dam failure was and remains a tragedy and will
never be forgotten. We are deeply sorry for the loss of life
and the damage it caused. We know that nothing can undo the
impacts it caused.
BHP has always been committed to supporting Samarco
and the Renova Foundation to do what's right for the people,
communities and environment affected. This comprehensive settlement
agreement with Brazilian public authorities is another step that
reflects that strong commitment.
The Settlement Agreement is in line with BHP's
existing Samarco dam failure provision of US$6.5 billion and no
update is required to the existing provision at this time.
Board and
succession
Before I conclude, I'd like to note some important
changes to our Board since last year's AGM.
As I mentioned earlier, Ian Cockerill and Terry Bowen
retired from the Board during the year, and we acknowledge their
significant contribution to BHP during their time with us.
We also had Ross McEwan and Don Lindsay join the
Board this year and shareholders will have the opportunity to hear
from them at today's meeting.
Both Ross and Don are deeply experienced business
leaders, and we welcome their skills and perspectives on our
Board.
Conclusion
As I mentioned at the start of my
address, we are living in a world which is increasingly
volatile.
However, we have great optimism in
what lies ahead.
As the world's population grows,
seeks a higher standard of living and advances the energy
transition, demand for the commodities we produce is set to endure
and grow.
With our world class portfolio we
are well placed to provide more of the commodities the world needs
in the decades ahead.
As we do, we will continue to drive
a culture of safe and reliable operations.
We will maintain rigorous capital
discipline.
And we will continue to build social
value, which is vital for sustainable long-term shareholder
returns.
Thank you for your continued support
and for investing in the future of BHP.
It is now my pleasure to invite your
CEO Mike Henry to speak with you.
1This includes
contribution to suppliers, wages and benefits for employees and
contractors, dividends, taxes and royalties, and voluntary social
investment. For more information refer to the BHP Economic
Contribution Report 2024, available at bhp.com.
2Includes payments to suppliers for operating costs on an
accruals basis and payments to suppliers for capital expenditure on
a cash basis.
3Includes payments to suppliers for operating costs on an
accruals basis and payments to suppliers for capital expenditure on
a cash basis.
Mike Henry, CEO
Thanks Ken, and thank you to everyone here with us in
Queensland today and watching online.
I'm looking forward to taking you through some of
this year's highlights, and talking about what I believe makes BHP
a successful company, worthy of your ongoing support.
But first, I'd like to echo Ken's acknowledgement of
the loss of a colleague at Saraji earlier this year.
Nothing is more important than the safety of our
people.
We have concluded our investigation and identified
improvements at Saraji and for BMA. We are working to
implement them at BMA and across the company, and to share them
with the industry.
We remain resolute in our commitment to eliminating
fatalities and serious injuries at BHP.
That commitment to doing what's right is one of our
Values and it extends to everything we do.
Last week I was in Brazil to finalise the Samarco settlement
agreement that Ken referenced earlier.
I also visited the community of Novo Bento Rodrigues for the second
time and saw firsthand the progress made in resettling those
displaced by the dam failure.
We can never undo the hurt and sorrow caused by the tragic events
of 2015.
However, this agreement is another significant step forward.
Approximately 500,000 people will be eligible for individual
compensation under the new system which will be faster, easier and
more certain.
The agreement will support ongoing programs
benefitting the environment and health, and it will support
socio-economic revitalisation.
It is wholly reflective of the values we seek to
uphold.
What we do matters
2024 was another year of strong delivery at BHP.
Of disciplined execution of our clear, simple
strategy…
And continued progress on shaping our portfolio for
the future.
In doing so, we have pursued our purpose of bringing
people and resources together to build a better world.
I want to focus on our purpose for a moment and build
on what Ken said about the opportunities for the world that are
underpinned by our people, partners and assets.
Specifically, I want to outline what we mean when we
talk about building a better world.
Let's look at the global shifts BHP's key commodities
support.
Rising living standards and food security for a
growing population...
Better and more liveable cities for an increasingly
urbanised world...
The world's net zero ambition and the rewiring of our
energy networks...
Our iron ore, copper, steelmaking coal and potash
support the pursuit of a very basic human instinct - to improve our
lives and those of the generations that come after us.
Billions of people seeking higher standards of living
is an enduring source of demand, and one we are proud to play a
part in delivering.
Infrastructure and electrification that make our
cities better, safer, and more liveable.
Data centres to power the Artificial Intelligence
boom, which will underpin new technologies and enable greater and
greater innovation.
Increasing productivity from decreasing arable land -
meaning more and better food for more people around the globe.
What we produce matters. And how we seek to do it
matters too.
I hope our shareholders are proud to be with us as we
move forward with our strategy. And I hope you see that our
progress has purpose.
Global economic
outlook
Governments around the world are focused on how they
deliver progress for their nations too.
We think markets work best when global trade and
economic cooperation are prioritised. A focus on economic
fundamentals - competitiveness, productivity, investment certainty
- allows capital to find its best use and stimulate
growth.
Removing barriers to trade, not building them.
Allowing capital to flow where it is most needed. Regional and
national economies working effectively as more than the sum of
their parts.
BHP will continue to engage constructively with
governments around the world to advocate for policy settings that
drive the competitiveness of their economies, benefit their
citizens, create jobs and encourage businesses to grow.
Strong operational
performance
Of course, value adding growth is firmly on our
agenda at BHP - and it is underpinned by our track record of strong
business performance in recent years.
In FY2024, we achieved production records at a number
of our assets and we widened our lead as the world's lowest cost
iron ore producer.
This is a credit to the more than 90,000 employees
and contractors who work so hard to build a better BHP every
day.
I can't speak strongly enough about the importance of
operational excellence to our success. We invest heavily in the
capability of our people. Our BHP Operating System, the way our
people work, from the mine site to the office, is a genuine
competitive advantage and a source of great pride across many parts
of our business.
The solid operational performance our workforce
delivered, along with higher prices in key commodities, helped us
deliver dividends totalling 146 US cents - or about 220 Australian
cents per share for the year. Since FY2021, BHP has paid the most
dividends of any mining company globally, and in fact has been one
of the highest dividend payers across all industries.
Our performance also allows us to plan for - and
invest in - value adding growth projects.
A portfolio for now
and for the future
As we have done that, we have continued to reshape
our portfolio to position BHP for the future. This deliberate
strategy gives the company and our shareholders greater exposure to
commodities that will stand to benefit as global megatrends play
out around us.
We have strengthened our already very strong position
in copper, and we're exploring further growth around the world.
Like in South Australia, where we could grow copper
production to around 500 thousand tonnes a year, with further
potential of up to 650 thousand.
At Escondida, already the world's largest copper
mine, where we have potential to add around 200 thousand tonnes per
year.
And at the Filo del Sol and Josemaria projects in
Argentina and Chile, which we will seek to advance through a 50/50
joint venture with Lundin Mining, after our Joint Acquisition of
Filo Corp.
We expect completion of that transaction in the March
2025 quarter, subject to regulatory approvals, and we will have the
opportunity to advance what we consider to be one of the most
significant copper discoveries in decades.
In nickel, conditions have been more challenging, and
we took the difficult but necessary decision to temporarily suspend
our Western Australia Nickel business.
We're continuing to invest to enable a potential
re-start at Western Australia Nickel if the market outlook
improves. We will review the decision by February 2027.
Across in Canada, construction of Stage 1 of our
Jansen potash project is more than halfway complete and ahead of
original schedule, and we've begun to execute Stage 2. First
production from Jansen is only around two years away.
By the end of the decade, we expect to be one of the
leading players in the potash industry globally. And this will feed
into a global market which is expected to grow strongly for
decades. Jansen is set to become a world class asset in an
investment friendly jurisdiction and create value for generations
to come.
Clear strategy,
disciplined execution
These decisions are consistent with our strategy,
which is clear and simple.
We have a differentiated portfolio of the best assets
in the most attractive commodities.
We operate them excellently and apply discipline to
our allocation of capital.
The precise execution of this strategy underpins our
results and our shareholder returns.
Resources is a cyclical industry. The stability of
our strategy and the reliability of our execution make for a
durable and resilient business.
We heard earlier from Ken about growing volatility in
the world. I speak regularly with investors, customers and partners
around the globe, so I know we are not alone in believing this will
continue for the foreseeable future.
In this global context, there is stability and
resilience in our size, the quality of our assets and the strength
of our partnerships. A strong balance sheet and diversified
commodity base helps to shield us against the cyclical nature of
our sector and geopolitical uncertainty.
It also leaves us well placed to work with smaller
miners and explorers to bring new deposits to market faster and
with less risk in execution.
And in doing all of this, we can continue to deliver
strong margins and cash flow.
BHP's record stacks up well. Over the past decade,
BHP's margin has averaged around 55 percent. That's over 10
percentage points higher than the average of the next closest major
competitor.
The creation of social value is integral as well, to
our strategy and to the delivery of long-term shareholder
value.
I spoke earlier about the irrefutable need for mining
as we work towards our future.
If the starting point is that we need more of these
resources, then the bigger questions are who should bring them to
market and how?
In our view, it will be large, diversified miners
like BHP with the balance sheet strength, track record of
operational excellence and social value credentials who will
increasingly play that role.
Building Social
Value
When we create social value, we build our case as the
preferred partner for communities and governments, we gain access
to more opportunities, and we attract the best talent.
The impact of our social value approach on our
current and future workforce is invaluable.
It's making our workforce more inclusive and diverse
- which drives better outcomes in safety and productivity.
And it's building a pipeline of future talent in
highly skilled roles that will help support productivity and keep
economies - including Australia's - strong.
This includes BHP's FutureFit Academy, established as
part of our Operations Services mining services organisation at a
cost of A$300 million, in Mackay here in Queensland and in Western
Australia.
The Academy has graduated more than 750
new-to-industry Australians, providing them with skills for the
future and a high-paying job with BHP from day one.
Our social value approach also drives tangible
results for the communities and suppliers vital to our business and
to livelihoods in the regions where we operate.
This year we spent more than US$3.3 billion with more
than 2,600 small, local and Indigenous businesses - up 9 percent on
last year.
Here in Australia, our Local Buying Program, which
was established first here in Queensland, has more than 1,500
registered suppliers, and we've approved over 90,000 work packages
worth over A$1 billion since its launch in 2012.
Finally, we also made further progress on our
operational decarbonisation plans and, as Ken noted, we remain on
track to meet our operational greenhouse gas emissions target of at
least a 30 per cent reduction by FY2030 against a FY2020
baseline.
This is valuable work that benefits our shareholders,
our partners, and every economy in which we operate.
Consistent, reliable
progress
It is an example of how, at BHP, we think and plan in
decades. We are focused on creating value now, and into the medium
and long term.
That mindset continues to serve our shareholders,
employees and partners well.
Again, ladies and gentlemen, what this company does,
matters.
Our work - and your support of it through your
investment in BHP - is vital to building the future we all want for
generations to come.
All while maintaining our focus on operational
performance, disciplined capital allocation, and value creation for
shareholders and communities.
This is a great company, performing well and made up
of people who want to make a difference.
I'm excited about the years ahead and confident that
BHP will continue to deliver value to you, our shareholders.
Thank you for your ongoing support.