Filed by: BHP Billiton Plc
and BHP Billiton Limited
Pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933
Subject Company: Rio Tinto plc
Commission File No.: 001-10533
The following are slides comprising an investor presentation that was first given on September 1, 2008.
September
2008 Investor Presentation |
Investor
Presentation Slide 2 Disclaimer By viewing this presentation you agree to be bound by the following conditions. The directors of BHP Billiton Limited and BHP Billiton Plc (BHP Billiton")
accept responsibility for the information contained in this presentation. Having taken all reasonable care to ensure that such is the case, the information contained in this presentation is, to the best
of the knowledge and belief of the directors of BHP Billiton, in accordance with the facts and contains no omission likely to affect its import. Subject to the above, neither BHP Billiton nor any of its directors, officers, employees or
advisers nor any other person makes any representation or warranty, express or implied, as to, and accordingly no reliance should be placed on, the fairness, accuracy or completeness of
the information contained in the presentation or of the views given or implied. To the extent permitted by law, neither BHP Billiton nor any of its directors, officers, employees or
advisers nor any other person shall have any liability whatsoever for any errors or omissions or any loss howsoever arising, directly or indirectly, from any use of this information or its
contents or otherwise arising in connection therewith. Information about Rio Tinto plc and Rio Tinto Limited ("Rio Tinto") is based on public information which has not been
independently verified. This presentation is for information purposes only and
does not constitute or form part of any offer for sale or issue of any securities or an offer or invitation to purchase or subscribe for any such securities, nor shall it or any part of it be relied on in connection with, any
contract or investment decision, nor does it constitute a proposal to make a takeover bid or the solicitation of any vote or approval in any jurisdiction, nor shall there be any sale of
securities in any jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such jurisdiction (or under
an exemption from such requirements). No offering of securities shall be made into the United States except pursuant to registration under the US Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or
an exemption therefrom. Neither this presentation nor any copy of it may be taken or transmitted or distributed or redistributed (directly or indirectly) in Japan. The
distribution of this presentation in other jurisdictions may be restricted by law and persons into whose possession this document comes should inform themselves about, and observe, any such
restrictions. This presentation is directed only at persons who (i) are
persons falling within Article 49(2)(a) to (d) ("high net worth companies, unincorporated associations etc.") of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 (as amended) (the "Order") or
(ii) have professional experience in matters relating to investments falling within Article 19(5) of the Order or (iii) are outside the United Kingdom (all such persons being referred to as
"relevant persons"). This presentation must not be acted on or relied on by persons who are not relevant persons. Certain statements in this presentation are forward-looking statements (including
statements regarding contribution synergies, future cost savings, the cost and timing of development projects, future production volumes, increases in production and infrastructure capacity,
the identification of additional mineral Reserves and Resources and project lives and, without limitation, other statements typically containing words such as "intends,"
"expects," "anticipates," "targets," plans," "estimates" and words of similar import.) These statements are based on current expectations and beliefs and numerous assumptions regarding BHP Billiton's
present and future business strategies and the environments in which BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto will operate in the future and such assumptions, expectations and beliefs may or may not
prove to be correct and by their nature, are subject to a number of known and unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results, performance and achievements to differ
materially. Factors that could cause actual results or performance to differ
materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, BHP Billiton's ability to successfully combine the businesses of BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto and to realise
expected synergies from that combination, the presence of a competitive proposal in relation to Rio Tinto, satisfaction of any conditions to any proposed transaction, including the receipt
of required regulatory and anti-trust approvals, Rio Tintos willingness to enter into any proposed transaction, the successful completion of any transaction, and the risk factors
discussed in BHP Billiton's and Rio Tintos filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") (including in Annual Reports on Form 20-F) which are available at the SEC's website
(http://www.sec.gov). Save as required by law or the rules of the UK Listing Authority and the London Stock Exchange, the UK Takeover Panel, or the listing rules of ASX Limited, BHP Billiton
undertakes no duty to update any forward-looking statements in this presentation. |
Investor
Presentation Slide 3 Disclaimer continued No statement concerning expected cost savings, revenue benefits (and resulting incremental
EBITDA) and EPS accretion in this presentation should be interpreted to mean that the future earnings per share of the enlarged BHP Billiton group for current and future
financial years will necessarily match or exceed the historical or published earnings per share of BHP Billiton, and the actual estimated cost savings and revenue benefits (and resulting
EBITDA enhancement) may be materially greater or less than estimated. Information Relating to the US Offer for Rio Tinto plc BHP Billiton plans to register the offer and sale of securities it would issue to Rio Tinto
plc US shareholders and Rio Tinto plc ADS holders by filing with the SEC a Registration Statement (the Registration Statement), which will contain a prospectus
(the Prospectus), as well as other relevant materials. No such materials have yet been filed. This communication is not a substitute for any Registration Statement or Prospectus that BHP
Billiton may file with the SEC. U.S. INVESTORS AND U.S. HOLDERS OF RIO TINTO
PLC SECURITIES AND ALL HOLDERS OF RIO TINTO PLC ADSs ARE URGED TO READ ANY REGISTRATION STATEMENT, PROSPECTUS AND ANY OTHER DOCUMENTS MADE AVAILABLE TO THEM AND/OR FILED WITH THE
SEC REGARDING THE POTENTIAL TRANSACTION, AS WELL AS ANY AMENDMENTS AND
SUPPLEMENTS TO THOSE DOCUMENTS, WHEN THEY BECOME AVAILABLE BECAUSE THEY WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION. Investors and security holders will be able to obtain a free copy of the Registration
Statement and the Prospectus as well as other relevant documents filed with the SEC at the SEC's website (http://www.sec.gov), once such documents are filed with the SEC. Copies of
such documents may also be obtained from BHP Billiton without charge, once they are filed with the SEC. Information for US Holders of Rio Tinto Limited Shares BHP Billiton Limited is not required to, and does not plan to, prepare and file with the
SEC a registration statement in respect of the Rio Tinto Limited Offer. Accordingly, Rio Tinto Limited shareholders should carefully consider the following: The Rio Tinto Limited Offer will be an exchange offer made for the securities of a foreign
company. Such offer is subject to disclosure requirements of a foreign country that are different from those of the United States. Financial statements included in the document
will be prepared in accordance with foreign accounting standards that may not be comparable to the financial statements of United States companies. Information Relating to the US Offer for Rio Tinto plc and the Rio Tinto Limited Offer for
Rio Tinto shareholders located in the US It may be difficult for you to enforce
your rights and any claim you may have arising under the U.S. federal securities laws, since the issuers are located in a foreign country, and some or all of their officers and directors may be residents of foreign countries. You may not
be able to sue a foreign company or its officers or directors in a foreign court for violations of the U.S. securities laws. It may be difficult to compel a foreign company and its
affiliates to subject themselves to a U.S. court's judgment. You should be
aware that BHP Billiton may purchase securities of either Rio Tinto plc or Rio Tinto Limited otherwise than under the exchange offer, such as in open market or privately negotiated purchases. BHP Billiton results are reported under International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).
References to Underlying EBIT and Underlying EBITDA exclude any exceptional items. A reconciliation to profit from operations is contained within the profit announcement
References in this presentation to $ are to United States dollars unless
otherwise specified. |
Investor
Presentation Slide 4 The largest mining company by market capitalisation Market Capitalisation as at 11 August 2008 (US$bn) BHP Billiton 0 30 60 90 120 150 180 *Rio Tinto Market Cap = Market Cap of Rio Tinto Plc + 62.6% of Market Cap of Rio Tinto Ltd (due to Rio Tinto Plcs **Market value may be unreliable due to a high percentage of non free-float shares. Sources: Datastream, Bloomberg approximate 37.4% holding of Rio Tinto Ltd, as per www.riotinto.com/investors/590_data_book.asp) |
Investor
Presentation Slide 5 With a diversified global portfolio Note: Location of dots indicative only Stainless Steel Materials #3 global nickel producer Iron Ore #3 global supplier of seaborne iron ore Manganese #1 global supplier of seaborne manganese ore Metallurgical Coal #1 global supplier of seaborne traded metallurgical coal Base Metals #3 global producer of copper, silver and lead Aluminium #4 global producer of bauxite and #4 aluminium company based on net third party sales Energy Coal #4 global supplier of seaborne export thermal coal Petroleum A significant oil and gas exploration and production business Diamonds & Specialty Products EKATI Diamond Mine is one of the worlds largest gem quality diamond producers Aluminium Base Metals Diamonds & Specialty Products Energy Coal Iron Ore Manganese Metallurgical Coal Petroleum Stainless Steel Materials Offices |
Investor
Presentation Slide 6 Our strategy Focus on value creation People Run current assets at full potential Accelerate development projects Create future options Growth options Project pipeline Financial strength and discipline World-class assets Licence to operate People |
Investor
Presentation Slide 7 Overview Year ended June 2008 Outstanding operating and financial results Annual production records set in 7 commodities Underlying EBITDA up 22% to US$28.0 billion Underlying EBIT up 21% to US$24.3 billion Attributable profit of US$15.4 billion, up 12% Earnings per share of 275 US cents, up 18% Underlying EBIT margin and ROCE of 48% and 38% respectively Growth projects proceeding well with significant volume growth achieved in FY2008 and expected in FY2009 Final dividend rebased to 41 US cents per share, an increase of 52%, consistent with outlook and higher earnings and cash flow |
Investor
Presentation Slide 8 Outstanding results driven by strategy and execution 3.1 3.5 5.5 9.9 15.3 20.1 24.3 0 5 10 15 20 25 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 Notes: a) FY2002 to FY2005 calculated on the basis of UKGAAP. Subsequent periods calculated under IFRS. Underlying EBIT (a) (US$bn) H2 H1 9.6 14.7 |
Investor
Presentation Slide 9 0 50 100 150 200 A track record of project delivery Copper equivalent production growth (a) (Indexed, 100=FY2001) Projects successfully delivered: 44 since the DLC merger 10 completed in FY2008 10% growth estimated in FY2009 Completed projects ramping up in FY2009 Atlantis South, Genghis Khan, Samarco, Ravensthorpe/Yabulu Exp., Cliffs, Koala Underground, Spence, Escondida Sulphide Leach and Pinto Valley First production expected in FY2009 GEMCO, Neptune, Shenzi, NWS Train 5, NWS Angel and Alumar Notes: a) Production from continuing operations converted to copper equivalent units using FY2008
average realised prices. |
Investor
Presentation Slide 10 Diversity = Stability and Strength % EBIT Margin (1) FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 H1 H2 Petroleum Aluminium Base Metals D&SP SSM Iron Ore Manganese Met Coal Energy Coal BHP Billiton (1) FY2002 to FY2005 are calculated under UKGAAP. Subsequent periods are calculated under IFRS. All periods exclude third party trading activities. |
Investor
Presentation Slide 11 Short-term global challenges exist Global economic activity is moderating Financial market instability, housing market decline and inflationary pressures Emerging economies not immune Inflationary pressures Some decline in fixed asset investment growth (isolated to a small number of industries) Exchange rate appreciation reducing export competitiveness 0% 2% 4% 6% Jun-06 Sep-06 Dec-06 Mar-07 Jun-07 Sep-07 Dec-07 Mar-08 Jun-08 United States annual GDP growth (a) (Annual growth, %) China annual GDP growth (b) (Annual growth, %) 8% 10% 12% 14% Jun-06 Sep-06 Dec-06 Mar-07 Jun-07 Sep-07 Dec-07 Mar-08 Jun-08 Notes: a) Source: US Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. b) Source: CEIC |
Investor
Presentation Slide 12 However, long-term fundamentals of emerging/developing economies remain intact 2.8% 2.3% 1.3% 2.9% 3.5% 6.4% 6.7% 7.0% 9.8% 10.1% 9.4% 10.1% 0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% 12% Average historical growth CY1990-CY2000 Average historical growth CY2001-CY2007 Average forecast growth CY2008-CY2009 Average forecast growth CY2010-CY2013 Developed Economies Emerging & Developing Economies China Source: World economic outlook database, April 2008. IMF world GDP growth (%) |
Investor
Presentation Slide 13 Urbanisation and industrialisation has resulted in a huge call on steelmaking raw materials 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 CY1970 CY1980 CY1990 CY2000 CY2007 CY2015E United States China Source: International Iron & Steel Institute (World Steel in Figures, 2008), US
Geological Survey (Iron and Steel Statistics, 3 January 2008) and BHP Billiton
estimates. Annual steel consumption (mtpa) Cumulative steel consumption since 1900 (mt) 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000 10,000 CY1970 CY1980 CY1990 CY2000 CY2007 CY2015E United States China |
Investor
Presentation Slide 14 Supply-side constraints are limiting the industrys response Equipment stress Industrial action and wage disputes Labour shortages Equipment shortages Significant cost pressures, including fuel Energy and power constraints Declines in ore-grade levels Rising tariffs Infrastructure bottlenecks Developments are increasingly tending to be: Smaller Lower grade Higher risk geographies Equipment shortages longer lead times and project delivery dates Rising capital costs Resources nationalism Existing Supply Future Supply Grow th |
Investor
Presentation Slide 15 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,000 12,000 14,000 CY2007 CY2008 CY2009F CY2010F CY2011F CY2012F Accelerating growth from a diversified portfolio of projects % of growth CY2007-2012 (Estimated & unrisked) Production in copper equivalent tonnes (Copper equivalent tonnes '000s) 45% 37% 18% Steelmaking Materials Energy Non-Ferrous Note: Growth in production volumes on a copper equivalent units basis between CY2007 and
CY2012 calculated using BHP Billiton estimates for BHP Billiton production.
Production volumes exclude BHP Billitons Specialty Products operation and all bauxite production. All energy coal businesses are included. Alumina volumes reflect only tonnes available for external sale.
Conversion of production forecasts to copper equivalent units completed using
long term consensus price forecasts, plus BHP Billiton assumptions for diamonds, domestic coal and manganese. Prices as at July 2008. |
Investor
Presentation Slide 16 Focused on low risk volume growth from existing assets, high margin CSGs and known regions By project type (b) 87% 13% Brownfield Greenfield By region (c) Existing New By country risk (d) 88% 12% Lower Higher 3% 97% By high margin vs lower margin CSGs (e) 63% 37% > 50% < 50% Projected growth in production in copper equivalent tonnes (a) (CY2007-CY2012) Notes: a) Growth in production volumes on a copper equivalent units basis between CY2007 and CY2012
calculated using BHP Billiton estimates for BHP Billiton production. Production volumes exclude BHP Billitons Specialty Products operation and all bauxite production. All
energy coal businesses are included. Alumina volumes reflect only tonnes available for external sale. Conversion of production forecasts to copper equivalent units completed using long term
consensus price forecasts, plus BHP Billiton assumptions for diamonds, domestic coal and manganese. Prices as at July 2008. b) Brownfield includes growth from existing operations as at 31-Dec-2007, as well as
expansions and additional developments of, or around those assets. c) Existing regions represents those countries in which BHP Billiton already has asset
operating as at 31-Dec-2007. d) Country risk methodology based on March 2008 Euromoney Magazine poll. Lower risk countries
defined as countries with risk scores >75% (except Chile and South Africa). e) High margin CSGs represents those with an average EBIT margin (excluding third party
trading activities) of greater than 50% over the past three financial years. |
Investor
Presentation Slide 17 Strong cash flow - delivering value to shareholders 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,000 12,000 14,000 16,000 18,000 20,000 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 H1 H2 0 1500 3000 4500 6000 7500 9000 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 Organic Growth 1 Return to Shareholders 2 (1) Includes capital and exploration expenditures (exclude acquisitions). (2) Includes dividends paid and share buy-backs. (3) FY2005 to FY2008 have been calculated on the basis of the IFRS. Prior periods have been calculated on the basis of UKGAAP. (4) FY2007 and FY2008 cashflow reflects proportional consolidation of joint ventures.
0 1500 3000 4500 6000 7500 9000 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 US$m US$m US$m Available Cash Flow |
Investor
Presentation Slide 18 Summary Excellent operating and financial results Long-term demand outlook remains strong despite some short-term economic uncertainty Supply-side constraints are limiting the ability for the industry to respond to demand growth BHP Billitons portfolio of assets focused in stable geographies provides a competitive advantage Future growth being delivered from lower risk projects Liverpool Bay |
BHP
Billitons of fer to acquire Rio Tinto |
Investor
Presentation Slide 20 BHP Billiton has made a pre-conditional offer for Rio Tinto, it will be capable of
acceptance by shareholders following completion of regulatory processes and
posting of offer documents Subject to pre-conditions relating to certain anti-trust clearances in the EU, the
US, Australia, Canada and South Africa and FIRB approval in Australia Rio Tinto shareholders are being offered 3.4 BHP Billiton shares for every Rio Tinto share held The offer represents a 45% premium to the undisturbed combined volume weighted average market capitalisation And an 8% premium, based on BHP Billitons current combined market capitalisation as
at 15-Aug-08 and the Rio Tinto combined market capitalisation immediately prior to the announcement confirming BHP Billitons approach The offer is conditional on more than 50% acceptances of the publicly held shares in each of
Rio Tinto plc and Rio Tinto Ltd BHP Billitons progressive dividend policy is expected to be maintained Proposed share buyback of up to US$30bn following completion if the offer is successful Buyback and any refinancing of Rio Tintos borrowings to be funded through a
combination of a US$55bn committed bank financing facility, cash flow from
operations, asset disposal proceeds and, if required, debt financing
Target single A credit rating DLC structure maintained Overview of BHP Billiton Offer for Rio Tinto Notes: a) Premium based on the combined volume-weighted market capitalisation of Rio Tinto based on the volume-weighted average closing share prices over the month ended 31-Oct-2007 of £43.09 and A$109.20 for Rio Tinto plc and Rio Tinto Ltd respectively and volume-weighted average closing share prices over the month ended 31-Oct-2007 of BHP Billiton Plc and BHP Billiton Ltd of £17.99 and A$45.77 respectively. Based on BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto issued ordinary shares outstanding (excluding Treasury shares and cross shareholdings eg. Rio Tinto plcs shareholding in Rio Tinto Ltd) as at 9-Nov-2007 and exchange rates of 2.077 US$/£ and 0.927 US$/A$ as at 31-Oct-2007. b) Consistent with the UK City Code on Takeovers and Mergers, this premium has been calculated based on the combined based on the combined market capitalisation of Rio Tinto based on the closing share prices of Rio Tinto plc of £43.50 on 7-Nov-2007 and Rio Tinto Ltd of A$113.40 on 8-Nov-2007 and closing share prices of BHP Billiton Plc and BHP Billiton Ltd of £15.29 and A$37.98 respectively on 15-Aug-2008. Based on BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto issued ordinary shares outstanding (excluding Treasury shares and cross shareholdings eg. Rio Tinto plcs shareholding in Rio Tinto Ltd) as at 15-Aug-2008 and exchange rates of 1.863 US$/£ and 0.865 US$/A$ as at 15-Aug-2008. Based on BHP Billitons share prices and exchange rates as at 15-Aug-2008 and
assuming 100% BHP Billiton Ltd shares for each Rio Tinto Ltd share and BHP Billiton shares for each Rio Tinto plc share consisting of 80% BHP Billiton Plc shares and
20% BHP Billiton Ltd shares, the value of the Rio Tinto plc offer was £53.58 and the value of the Rio Tinto Ltd offer was A$129.13 as at
15-Aug-2008. The closing share prices of Rio Tinto plc and Rio Tinto Ltd on 15-Aug-2008 were £46.05 and A$115.15 respectively. c) i.e. if BHP Billiton acquires 100% of the shares in Rio Tinto Limited and Rio Tinto plc on
the 3.4:1 announced offer terms. (a) (b) (c) |
Investor
Presentation Slide 21 Detail on BHP Billiton offer for Rio Tinto Rio Tinto plc Offer: Rio Tinto plc shareholders will receive 3.4 BHP Billiton shares for every Rio Tinto plc
share held 80% in BHP Billiton Plc shares 20% in BHP Billiton Ltd shares Separate US offer (which forms part of the Rio Tinto plc Offer) to: US resident shareholders of Rio Tinto plc shares All holders of Rio Tinto plc ADRs Rio Tinto Ltd Offer: Rio Tinto Ltd shareholders will receive 3.4 BHP Billiton Ltd shares for every Rio Tinto Ltd
share held Unique synergy potential: Expected material quantifiable synergies and financial benefits unique to this combination
(a) US$1.7bn nominal per annum from cost savings US$2.0bn additional nominal per annum primarily from volume acceleration Other combination benefits With a mix and match facility a) Estimated incremental EBITDA based on publicly available information. To be read in
conjunction with the notes in Appendix IV of BHP Billitons announcement dated 6-Feb-2008. Full run rate synergies expected by year 7. Assumes BHP Billiton gains 100% of the shares of Rio Tinto Limited and Rio Tinto plc on the
3.4:1 announced offer terms. |
Investor
Presentation Slide 22 Unlocking further value through a combination with Rio Tinto Optimising mineral basin positions and infrastructure Lower cost, more efficient production Unlocking volume through matching reserves with infrastructure Enhanced platform for future growth Deployment of scarce resources to highest value opportunities Greater ability to develop the next generation of large scale projects in new geographies Better positioned as partner of choice with governments and stakeholders Efficient exploration and infrastructure development Unique synergies and combination benefits Economies of scale especially procurement Avoid duplication, reduce corporate and divisional non-operating costs Accelerate tonnage delivered to market |
Investor
Presentation Slide 23 Indicative Timetable for the Offer Feb Mar Nov Dec Jan Oct Sep Aug Jul Jun May Apr Mar Feb Jan 2009 2008 6-Feb-2008 BHP Billiton announced pre- conditional offers for all of the outstanding shares of Rio Tinto Offer Announcement Satisfaction of Regulatory Approval Pre-conditions 30-May-2008: Form CO filed with the European Commission 3-Jul-2008: US merger review completed 4-Jul-2008: Entered into Phase 2 investigation with the European Commission European Commission decision due by December 2008 All regulatory pre-conditions expected to be completed or waived by the Offer Period Early 2009 UK Offer Timetable 50% minimum acceptance condition must be satisfied in both the Rio Tinto plc and Rio Tinto Ltd offers by end of 2008 Day 60 |
Appendix |
Investor
Presentation Slide 25 2007
2008 Financial highlights % Change Year ended June (US$m) Revenue 59,473 47,473 25.3 Underlying EBITDA 28,031 22,950 22.1 Underlying EBIT 24,282 20,067 21.0 Attributable profit (excluding exceptionals) 15,368 13,675 12.4 Attributable profit 15,390 13,416 14.7 Net operating cash flow 18,159 15,957 13.8 EPS (excluding exceptionals) (US cents) 274.9 233.9 17.5 Dividend per share (US cents) 70.0 47.0 48.9 |
Investor
Presentation Slide 26 Return on capital and margins (1) FY2005 to FY2008 are shown on the basis of IFRS. Prior periods are calculated under UKGAAP. All periods exclude third party trading.
35% 38% 38% 44% 48% 48% 29% 21% 13% 11% 40% 30% 24% 20% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 Return on Capital EBIT Margin (1) |
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Presentation Slide 27 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% Capex (LHS) Capitalised Exploration (LHS) Acquisitions (LHS) ROCE (RHS) Strong Return On Capital Employed despite record capital investments Capital and exploration expenditure (US$bn) Notes: FY2002 to FY2005 are shown on the basis of UKGAAP. Subsequent periods are calculated under IFRS. ROCE |
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Presentation Slide 28 Our portfolio is diversified and balanced across high margin commodities Underlying EBIT Margin (a) (FY2008) Notes: a) EBIT Margin excludes third party trading activities. 67% 30% 31% 62% 20% 25% 24% 48% 51% 58% Underlying EBIT (FY2008, US$bn) 0 5 10 15 20 25 Energy (27%) Non Ferrous (44%) Steelmaking Materials (29%) Iron Ore Manganese Energy Coal Metallurgical Coal D & SP Base Metals Petroleum Stainless Steel Materials Aluminium Iron Ore Manganese Energy Coal Metallurgical Coal Diamonds and Specialty Products Base Metals Petroleum Stainless Steel Materials Aluminium Group |
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Presentation Slide 29 Underlying EBIT by Customer Sector Group Petroleum 5,489 3,014 +82.1 Record EBIT and production Operating cash costs held under US$5 per BOE 3 new major projects commissioned and volume growth expected to continue Strong operational performance - Stybarrow continued to produce at full capacity and excellent facility uptime in all operations Continued replenishment of project and exploration pipeline Greater than 100% reserve replacement for the second consecutive year 2007
2008 % Change Year ended June (US$m) Neptune |
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Presentation Slide 30 Underlying EBIT by Customer Sector Group Aluminium 1,465 1,856 -21.1 Base Metals 7,989 6,875 +16.2 2007
2008 % Change Year ended June (US$m) Record alumina production South African power situation will continue to impact metal production Worsley E&G approved Record copper production despite supply disruptions in South America Pampa Escondida discovery Worsley Escondida |
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Presentation Slide 31 Underlying EBIT by Customer Sector Group Ekati Diamonds & Specialty Products 189 197 -4.1 2007
2008 % Change Year ended June (US$m) Koala Underground ramping up strongly Anglo Potash acquisition adding flexibility for future growth Stainless Steel Materials 1,275 3,675 -65.3 EBIT impacted by lower prices and volume, and higher costs Ravensthorpe, Yabulu Expansion Project and Cliffs commissioned Ravensthorpe |
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Presentation Slide 32 Underlying EBIT by Customer Sector Group Manganese 1,644 253 +549.8 2007
2008 % Change Year ended June (US$m) Record production due to successful project execution Exceptional local currency cost control at Western Australia Iron Ore Strong volume growth expected in FY2009 Growth plan underpinned by extensive exploration and development program Record production, results and margin Low cost volume expansions underway Mount Newman GEMCO Iron Ore 4,631 2,728 +69.8 |
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Presentation Slide 33 Underlying EBIT by Customer Sector Group Metallurgical Coal 937 1,247 -24.9 2007
2008 % Change Year ended June (US$m) Strong recovery from flood impacts in Queensland Costs impacted by recovery activities Great outlook for margins Market remains tight Growth pipeline being accelerated Energy Coal 1,057 481 +119.8 Record EBIT Higher export prices driven by strong demand Record production at Hunter Valley and Cerrejon 3 projects sanctioned during the year Illawarra Coal Hunter Valley Coal |
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Presentation Slide 34 Underlying EBIT analysis Year ended June 08 vs June 07 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 30,000 Jun-07 Net Price Volume Exchange Inflation Cash Costs Non Cash Costs Exploration & Bus Dev Other Jun-08 US$m 20,067 6,559 1,828 (1,133) (532) (967) (216) (404) (920) 24,282 (1) Including $134m of price-linked costs impact. (2) Including $1,619m due to increase in volume from new operations. (1) (2) |
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Presentation Slide 35 High capture of price benefit to EBIT 20,067 US$m 6,559 4,215 64% (1) Net price variance includes the impact of price-linked costs. Price-linked costs is
defined as any costs which fluctuate in line with movements in price such as
royalties, TC/RC and LME linked costs. 24,282 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,000 12,000 14,000 16,000 18,000 20,000 22,000 24,000 26,000 28,000 FY2007 EBIT Net Price Variance (1) Price to EBIT FY2008 EBIT |
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Presentation Slide 36 Impact of major commodity price Year ended June 08 vs June 07 -1500 -1000 -500 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 Total price variance US$6,559 million (1) US$m Petroleum 1,684 Copper 946 Manganese 1,465 Iron Ore 2,134 Energy Coal 1,062 Nickel (1,066) Diamonds 80 Aluminium (51) Met Coal 151 (1) Net of $134m of price-linked costs impact. Other 154 |
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Presentation Slide 37 -400 -200 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 Impact of major volume changes Year ended June 08 vs June 07 US$m Total volume (1) variance US$1,828 million Petroleum 894 Met Coal (47) Iron Ore 424 Aluminium/ Alumina 20 D&SP 19 Energy Coal 38 Copper 727 Nickel (313) Other 47 (1) Volume variances calculated using previous year margin and includes new operations
Manganese 20 |
Investor
Presentation Slide 38 Rate of cost increase FY2005 is shown on the basis of UKGAAP. Other periods are calculated under IFRS. All periods exclude third party trading and non cash costs. 0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% 7% FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 Other Costs Raw Materials Fuel & Energy Operating cost increase relative to preceding year 4.9% 6.8% 3.6% 4.3% |
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Presentation Slide 39 -250 -150 -50 50 150 250 350 450 550 650 Cash cost increase mostly recouped in revenue Maintenance US$m People Fuel & Energy Shipping & Freight Raw Materials QCoal Rain Impact CMSA Strike 244 13 204 70 371 50 120 100 (225) (1) Excluding non-cash costs of US$216m (mostly depreciation on growth capital). KNS Furnace Rebuild 20 Recouped in Revenue $645m Investment $257m One Offs $190m Other $100m Business Excellence $225m $967m (1) |
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Presentation Slide 40 Cash flow Operating cash flow and dividends 25,541 22,012 Net interest paid (630) (494) Tax paid (1) (6,752) (5,561) Net operating cash flow 18,159 15,957 Capital expenditure (7,558) (7,129) Exploration expenditure (1,350) (805) Purchases of investments (336) (757) Proceeds from sale of fixed assets & investments 180 378 Net cash flow before dividends and funding 9,095 7,644 Dividends paid (2) (3,250) (2,339) Net cash flow before funding & buy-backs 5,845 5,305 2008 2007 Year ended June (US$m) (1) Includes royalty related taxes paid (2) Includes dividends paid to minority interests |
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Presentation Slide 41 Ordinary dividends per share (US cents per share) 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 H1 H2 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 Earnings per share (US cents per share) Note: BHP Billitons EPS represents reported underlying EPS for the financial year ending 30
June. Delivering superior returns to shareholders CAGR 36% CAGR 37% |
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Presentation Slide 42 Portfolio management US$6.3bn of disposals 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 Sale Proceeds Base Metals D&SP Energy Coal SSM Petroleum Steel Other Column 9 180 FY 2008 378 FY 2007 6,287 Total proceeds 845 FY 2002 2,472 FY 2003 (1) 277 FY 2004 1,035 FY 2005 1,100 FY 2006 US$m Proceeds from sale of assets (1) Includes BHP Steel demerger and BHP Steel loans (net of cash disposed and costs) US$m |
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Presentation Slide 43 Resourcing the Future BHP Billitons response BHP Billiton has not been immune from supply constraint issues But our scale, global presence and diversification provides significant competitive advantages We are focused on the disciplined execution of the core strategy And on pursuing a renewed organisational focus on simplicity, accountability and effectiveness Port Hedland |
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Presentation Slide 44 3,000 Europe Japan Other Asia Nth America China ROW Australia Diversification remains for sales into China 20% of total company revenues in FY2008 US$m 431 785 1,075 1,357 371 1,588 2,407 2,946 3,611 3,999 5,293 5,013 6,657 FY2008 revenue by location of customer 0 1,000 2,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 FY02 H1 03 H2 03 H1 04 H2 04 H1 05 H2 05 H1 06 H2 06 H1 07 H2 07 H1 08 H2 08 Petroleum Aluminium Base Metals Iron Ore Met Coal Manganese Energy Coal SSM Other |
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Presentation Slide 45 China and India account for a major share of world commodity demand Notes: Iron ore represents imports. Coal includes all coal types. Europe
excludes former Soviet Union. Source: CRU International Ltd, Quarterly
Reports (April-June 2008); Brook Hunt Aluminium Metal Service (July 2008); BP Statistical Review of World Energy, June 2008; IISI Steel Statistical Yearbook (December 2007) and World Steel in Figures (2008) 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Coal Fe Ore Steel Al Cu Ni Energy Oil Other Europe Japan USA India China Share of World Commodity Demand 2007 (%) |
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Presentation Slide 46 Chinas commodity demand and its percentage share of world demand 000 tonnes Data: CRU Copper Quarterly, April 2008 000 tonnes Data: CRU Nickel Quarterly, June 2008 Data: Brook Hunt Aluminium Metal Service, July 2008 000 tonnes million tonnes Data: IISI Steel Statistical Yearbook (Dec. 2007); China Customs data (www.customs.gov.cn); CRU - "The Iron Ore Market Service" Interim Report, December 2007; The Tex Report (February 2008); Iron ore data are seaborne traded, based on import statistics Copper Nickel Aluminium Iron Ore 0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 4,000 4,500 5,000 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% Chinese refined copper consumption % share of world refined copper consumption (right hand scale) 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% Chinese primary nickel consumption % share of world primary nickel consumption (right hand scale) 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% 50% Chinese iron ore imports % share of global seaborne iron ore (right hand scale) 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,000 12,000 14,000 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% Chinese aluminium consumption % share of global aluminium consumption (right hand scale) |
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Presentation Slide 47 Copper GDP per capita vs consumption per capita Copper consumption (kg/capita) 0 5 10 15 20 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 30,000 35,000 40,000 45,000 50,000 GDP/Capita (Jan 2008 Constant US Dollars) China Germany India Japan Korea, Rep. United States Taiwan *Note: Based on a projection of similar growth patterns to the other nations shown Source: World Bank (World Development Indicators Online Database, February 2008); Government Statistics for Taiwan (www.stat.gov.tw); CRU Copper Quarterly (January 2008) |
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Presentation Slide 48 1975-2008 Emerging Market growth Maturing of Japan 1990: Collapse of USSR Productivity & IT revolution Commodification Cost benefits from technology and economies of scale Emerging Markets and Chinas long boom Renewed call on copper resources Global Copper Prices in 1880-2008 10-Year Moving Average Real Annual Cu Price 1880-1914 Second Industrial Revolution & US economic expansion Electrification Colonial/imperial raw materials networks Rising real prices Expansion of US copper mining Expansion in African Copperbelt Expansion in Chile/Peru Escondida & Freeport Flotation, open-pit mining and mechanisation Flash smelting Birth of Sx/Ew WWI WWII Twin Oil Shocks Collapse of USSR Wall Street Crash 1920-2007 Sources of data: CRU Quarterly Reports (April 2008, and archives); US Geological Survey - Metal Prices in the US Through 1998, (http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals); US Bureau of Economic Analysis (US CPI Database); London Metals Exchange, (http://www.lme.co.uk) Chinas Boom 1970s Oil Shocks Inflation/recession Demand slumps Substitution LME pricing Costs and prices fall from peaks Vietnam War 1950-1973 Post-war boom Japans economic miracle High demand growth Nationalisation in Chile, Peru, Mexico and Africa Costs and prices rise Producer pricing Korean War 0.00 0.50 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50 3.00 3.50 4.00 1880 1890 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 1920-1945 Great Depression World War II High military demand Investment dries up Prices collapse and stagnate |
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Presentation Slide 49 Energy GDP per capita vs energy use per capita Primary energy use (toe/capita) 0 2 4 6 8 10 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 30,000 35,000 40,000 45,000 50,000 GDP/Capita (Jan 2008 Constant US Dollars) China Germany India Japan Korea, Rep. United States Taiwan *Note: Based on a projection of similar growth patterns to the other nations shown. toe stands for tonnes of oil equivalent Source: World Bank World Development Indicators Online Database (February 2008), Government Statistics for Taiwan (www.stat.gov.tw); BP Statistical Review of World Energy June 2007 |
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Presentation Slide 50 Emerging markets are driving energy consumption growth 36% 9% 5% 50% China Other Europe North America Source: BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2008. Notes: Primary energy comprises commercially traded fuels only. Oil consumption measured in
million tonnes, other fuels converted to million tonnes of oil equivalent as detailed in the Appendices of the Review. Share of world primary energy consumption (mmtoe) Growth in energy consumption CY2000-2007 (mmtoe) 10% 17% 30% 26% 30% 27% 30% 31% 0% 100% CY2000 CY2007 Other Europe North America China |
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Presentation Slide 51 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,000 12,000 14,000 16,000 2000 2010 2020 2030 Strong long-term global growth in energy demand Energy demand growth (CAGR) (mmtoe) +1.6% +2.4% +1.4% Oil Gas Coal Nuclear Hydro Renewables Source : IEA World Energy Outlook |
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Presentation Slide 52 Steel GDP per capita vs consumption per capita Finished steel consumption (kg/capita) 0 200 400 600 800 1,000 1,200 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 30,000 35,000 40,000 45,000 50,000 GDP/Capita (Jan 2008 Constant US Dollars) China Germany India Japan Korea, Rep. United States Taiwan *Note: Based on a projection of similar growth patterns to the other nations shown
Source: World Bank (World Development Indicators Online Database, February 2008);
Government Statistics for Taiwan (www.stat.gov.tw); IISI Steel Statistical Yearbook (Dec. 2007) |
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Presentation Slide 53 China is the worlds largest steel producer Source: IISI and BHP Billiton estimates. Note crude steel production growth calculated based on the change in annual production
between years ended 1996 and 2007. 0 250 500 750 1,000 1,250 1,500 1996 2007 Crude steel production (mt) China USA Japan Europe Other India 66% 20% 5% 4% 5% 0% Crude steel production growth (1996-2007) (mt) China USA Japan Europe Other 100% = 590 India |
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Presentation Slide 54 Source: GTIS and CRU South America Domestic supply / demand 4.27x 0.00x Iron Ore Met Coal India Domestic supply / demand 2.36x 0.12x Iron Ore Met Coal China Domestic supply / demand 0.34x 0.99x Iron Ore Met Coal CIS / Other Europe 1.03x 0.92x Iron Ore Met Coal Domestic supply / demand Steelmaking materials - Australia is the natural supplier to Asia 83 24 159 68 16 260 90 22 27 |
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Presentation Slide 55 But so is Metallurgical coal Leading position in the seaborne market 100% BMA owned Hay Point limits impact of infrastructure constraints Significant growth options Iron Ore is an important part of the mix Geographic proximity to the growing Asian market Record annual production and shipments Plans underway to expand WAIO system capacity (100%) to 300mtpa by 2015 And Manganese is a significant contributor Largest supplier of seaborne manganese ore from high quality resource base Manganese ore and alloy assets operating at record production levels in a strong demand environment BHP Billiton has a leading position in the steelmaking commodities 23% 64% 13% Total Carbon Steel Sector FY2008 EBIT (Total = US$7.2bn) Manganese Met Coal Iron Ore |
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Presentation Slide 56 Existing supply: Equipment shortages are continuing CY2004 CY2005 CY2006 CY2007 CY2008 CY2009 Tyres and Trucks Tyres (2004) OEM underinvestment Radial tyre market undersupply >30% Trucks (2007) Access to castings, forgings Effect of non-mining competitors Oil sands Draglines & Shovels Historical cyclicality has contributed to underinvestment Market limited Supply Base Availability of raw materials/steel Ammonium Nitrate Production capacity constraints Shortage of raw materials High capital costs Stringent import regulations Grinding Mills Access to castings, forgings Production capacity constraints Increased steel prices Skilled labour shortages ? Timing of initial supply constraint manifestation |
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Presentation Slide 57 Future industry supply growth: New projects are encountering delays Source: Brook Hunt. Note: Forecast production as at 2008 Q2 represents the expected future production as at 2008 Q2 from those copper developments classified as highly probable and probable as at 2006 Q1. It excludes new developments classified as highly probable or probable since 2006 Q1. Expected future production from highly probable and probable copper developments (kt) Forecast production as at 2006 Q1 Forecast production as at 2008 Q2 2-3 year delays 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 CY2006 CY2007 CY2008 CY2009 CY2010 CY2011 CY2012 CY2013 CY2014 CY2015 CY2016 CY2017 |
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Presentation Slide 58 Boffa/Santou Refinery As at 14 August 2008 Proposed capital expenditure $500m $501m-$2bn $2bn+ SSM Energy Coal D&SP Iron Ore Base Metals Petroleum Met Coal CSG Manganese Aluminium 2009 Execution Atlantis North 2013 Feasibility Worsley E&G Future Options Newcastle Third Port WA Iron Ore Quantum 2 Potash - Jansen WA Iron Ore Quantum 1 Angola & DRC WA Iron Ore RGP 5 Turrum DRC Smelter Maintenance of a deep diversified inventory of growth options NWS Nth Rankin B Browse LNG Shenzi Nth Klipspruit Thebe Wards Well Scarborough Caroona WA Iron Ore RGP 6 MKO Talc Corridor Sands Kennedy Saraji Exp Red Hill UG Resolution Neptune Nth GEMCO Exp Ekati Guinea Alumina Angostura Gas HPX3 Maruwai Stage 1 Knotty Head Samarco 4 Peak Downs Exp (Caval Ridge) Macedon CMSA Heap Leach 1 Antamina Exp Newcastle Third Port Exp Mad Dog West Mt Arthur Coal UG Cerrejon Opt Exp Maruwai Stage 2 Navajo Sth Perseverance Deeps Mt Arthur Coal OC (MAC20) Goonyella Expansions Escondida Moly New Saraji Eastern Indonesian Facility Douglas- Middelburg WA Iron Ore RGP 4 Kipper GEMCO Shenzi Alumar Pyrenees Olympic Dam Expansion 1 CMSA Heap Leach 2 CW Africa Exploration Escondida 3rd Conc CMSA Pyro Expansion Puma Blackwater UG NWS WFGH Nimba Olympic Dam Expansion 3 RBM Cannington Life Ext Potash Gabon Mt Arthur Coal (MACX) Olympic Dam Expansion 2 NWS CWLH Bakhuis Daunia NWS Angel NWS T5 |
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Presentation Slide 59 0.0 3.0 6.0 9.0 12.0 15.0 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 FY2009F Exploration Sustaining Capex Growth Expenditure Capital & exploration expenditure US$bn (1) FY2009 includes US$700m for Petroleum FY2002 to FY2005 are shown on the basis of UKGAAP. Subsequent periods are calculated under IFRS. US$ billion FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 FY2006 FY2007 FY2008 FY2009F Growth 1.9 2.0 1.7 2.6 4.0 5.5 6.1 9.9 Sustaining & Other 0.8 0.7 0.9 1.3 2.1 1.6 1.8 2.1 Exploration (1) 0.4 0.3 0.5 0.5 0.8 0.8 1.4 1.5 Total 3.1 3.0 3.1 4.4 6.9 7.9 9.3 13.5 |
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Presentation Slide 60 Sanctioned development projects (US$12.4bn) On schedule and budget 1-2 million tpa Mid CY09 100 Met Coal Maruwai Stage 1/Haju (Indonesia) 100% On schedule and budget Third coal berth capable of handling an estimated 30 million tpa End CY10 390 Energy Coal Newcastle Third Port (Australia) 35.5% On schedule and budget 10 million tpa export thermal coal and 8.5 million tpa domestic thermal coal (sustains current output) Mid CY10 975 Energy Coal Douglas Middelburg Optimisation (South Africa) 100% On schedule and budget 1.1 million tpa H1 CY11 1,900 Alumina Worsley Efficiency and Growth (Australia) 86% On schedule and budget Incremental 1.8 million tpa export coal Incremental 2.1 million tpa domestic H2 CY09 450 Energy Coal Klipspruit (South Africa) 100% On schedule and budget Additional 1 million tpa manganese concentrate H1 CY09 110 Mn Ore GEMCO (Australia) 60 % On schedule and budget Increase system capacity to 155 million tpa H1 CY10 1,850 Iron Ore Western Australia Iron Ore RGP 4 (Australia) 86.2% Schedule and budget under review 2 million tpa Q2 CY09 725 Alumina Alumar Refinery Expansion (Brazil) 36% Production Capacity (100%) Progress Initial Production Target Date Share of Approved Capex US$m Commodity Minerals Projects |
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Presentation Slide 61 Sanctioned development projects (US$12.4bn) cont. On schedule and budget 2,500 million cubic feet gas per day CY12 850 LNG NWS North Rankin B (Australia) 16.67% On schedule and budget 11,000 bpd condensate and processing capacity of 200 million cubic feet gas per day CY11 625 Oil/Gas Turrrum (Australia) 50% On schedule and budget 96,000 barrels of oil and 60 million cubic feet gas per day H1 CY10 1,200 Oil/Gas Pyrenees (Australia) 71.43% On schedule and budget Tie-back to Atlantis South H2 CY09 185 Oil/Gas Atlantis North (US) 44% On schedule and budget 100,000 barrels and 50 million cubic feet gas per day Mid CY09 1,940 Oil/gas Shenzi (US) 44% On schedule and budget 800 million cubic feet gas per day and 50,000 bpd condensate End CY08 200 Oil/Gas North West Shelf Angel (Australia) 16.67% On schedule and budget 10,000 bpd condensate and processing capacity of 80 million cubic feet gas per day CY11 500 Oil/Gas Kipper (Australia) 32.5%-50% On schedule and budget LNG processing capacity 4.2 million tpa Late CY08 350 LNG North West Shelf 5th Train (Australia) 16.67% Production Capacity (100%) Progress Initial Production Target Date Share of Approved Capex US$m Commodity Petroleum Projects |
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Presentation Slide 62 Development projects in feasibility (US$12.4bn) Maintain Nickel West system capacity H2 CY13 500 Nickel Perseverance Deeps (Australia) 100% 5.7 million tpa saleable coal CY 2013 850 Energy Coal Navajo South Mine Extension (USA) 100% (1) 5 million tpa saleable coal CY 2011 700 Energy Coal Mt Arthur Coal UG (Australia) 100% (2) 8 million tpa H2 CY11 300 Energy Coal Cerrejon (Colombia) 33.3% Increase system capacity to 200 million tpa H2 CY11 6,110 Iron Ore Western Australia Iron Ore RGP 5 (Australia) 86.2% (1) 3.7 million tpa export coal H2 CY10 300 Energy Coal Mt Arthur Coal OC MAC20 (Australia) 100% 3-5 million tpa clean coal CY 2012 500 Met Coal Maruwai Stage 2/Lampunut (Indonesia) 100% (1) 3 million tpa CY 2010 250 Met Coal Daunia (Australia) 50% 3.3 million tpa H2 CY11 1,700 Alumina Guinea Alumina Project (Guinea) 33.3% 6.9 million tpa bauxite H1 CY10 727 Bauxite Bakhuis 100% (Suriname/ Paranam 45%) Project Capacity (100%)* Forecast Initial Production* Estimated Share of Capex* US$m Commodity Minerals Projects (US$4.7bn) Note: All projects in feasibility remain under review until they are approved to move to execution. During the feasibility phase project schedules and capex are indicative only. However, from time to time estimates may be periodically
reviewed as project milestones are achieved. (1) Project parameters are currently under review (2) Project now sequenced to follow Mount Arthur Coal OC (MAC20) |
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Presentation Slide 63 Development projects in feasibility (US$12.4bn) * Indicative only 280 million cubic feet gas per day H1 CY11 220 Gas Angostura Gas (Trinidad & Tobago) 45% 60,000 barrels of oil and 90 million cubic feet gas per day H2 CY10 250 Oil/Gas NWS CWLH (Australia) 16.67% Project Capacity (100%)* Forecast Initial Production* Estimated Share of Capex* US$m Commodity Petroleum Projects (US$600m) |
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Presentation Slide 64 Development projects commissioned since July 2001 Q2 CY04 Q2 CY04 80 83 WA Iron Ore Accelerated Expansion (Australia) 85% Mid CY04 Mid CY04 294 294 NWS Train 4 (Australia) 16.7% Q1 CY04 Q2 CY04 266 299 Products & Capacity Expansion (Australia) 85% Q1 CY04 Q1 CY04 33 50 Cerrejon Zona Norte (Colombia) 33.3% Q4 CY03 Q4 CY03 464 515 Ohanet (Algeria) 45% Q4 CY03 Q2 CY04 411 449 Hillside 3 (South Africa) 100% Q4 CY03 Q4 CY03 380 411 Mt Arthur North (Australia) 100% Q3 CY03 Q4 CY03 171 181 Area C (Australia) 85% Q2 CY03 Q3 CY03 40 40 Zamzama (Pakistan) 38.5% Q2 CY01 Q2 CY01 752 775 Antamina (Peru) 33.75% Q4 CY02 Q2 CY03 34 50 Bream Gas Pipeline (Australia) 50% Q3 CY02 Q3 CY02 543 600 Escondida Phase IV (Chile) 57.5% Q3 CY02 Q3 CY02 143 146 San Juan Underground (US) 100% Q2 CY02 Q2 CY02 120 138 Tintaya Oxide (Peru) 99.9% Q3 CY01 Q3 CY01 114 128 Typhoon (US) 50% Mozal 2 (Mozambique) 47.1% Project Q2 CY03 Q4 CY03 311 405 Initial Production Date Our Share of Capex Actual Budget Actual US$m Budget US$m |
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Presentation Slide 65 Development projects commissioned since July 2001 Q2 CY06 H2 CY06 566 500 Escondida Sulphide Leach (Chile) 57.5% Q2 CY06 H2 CY06 501 489 Western Australia Iron Ore RGP2 (Australia) 85% Q4 CY06 Q4 CY06 1,100 990 Spence (Chile) 100% Q4 CY06 H2 CY06 88 (1) 88 BMA Phase 2 (Australia) 50% Q2 CY06 Q1 CY06 188 165 Worsley Development Capital Project (Australia) 86% Q4 CY05 Q3 CY05 33 29 Paranam Refinery Expansion (Suriname) 45% Oct 2005 Q4 CY05 251 230 Escondida Norte (Chile) 57.5% Mid CY05 Mid CY05 100 90. BMA Phase 1 (Including Broadmeadow) (Australia) 50% April 2005 Mid CY05 200 200. Dendrobium (Australia) 100% April 2005 Early CY05 139 146 Panda Underground (Canada) 80% Jan 2005 End CY04 337 327 Angostura (Trinidad) 45% Jan 2005 End CY04 263 218. Mad Dog (US) 23.9% Q4 CY04 Q4 CY04 154 132 GoM Pipelines Infrastructure (US) 22/25% Q4 CY04 Q4 CY04 101 95 Western Australia Iron Ore RGP (Australia) 85% Q4 CY04 Q3 CY04 204 192 ROD (Algeria) 38% Minerva (Australia) 90% Project Jan 2005 Q4 CY04 174 163. Initial Production Date Our Share of Capex Actual Budget Actual US$m Budget US$m |
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Presentation Slide 66 Development projects commissioned since July 2001 H1 CY08 H1 CY08 139 (1) 139 Cliffs (Australia) 100% Q1 CY08 Q1 CY08 580 556 Yabulu Extension (Australia) 100% H1 CY08 H1 CY08 740 (1) 590 Samarco (Brazil) 50% Q3 CY08 Q1 CY08 418 405 Neptune (US) 35% Q4 CY07 Q4 CY07 144 (1) 140 Pinto Valley (USA) 100% Q4 CY07 Q4 CY07 1,300 (1) 1,300 Western Australia Iron Ore RGP3 (Australia) 86.2% Q4 CY07 Q1 CY08 2,086 2,200 Ravensthorpe (Australia) 100% End CY07 End CY07 176 200 Koala Underground (Canada) 80% Q2 CY08 Q2 CY08 389 380 Stybarrow (Australia) 50% H2 CY07 H2 CY07 1,630 (1)(2) 1,630 Atlantis South (US) 44% H2 CY07 H2 CY07 365 365 Genghis Khan (US) 44% H1 CY07 Mid CY07 140 (1) 100 Blackwater Coal Preparation (Australia) 50% Project Initial Production Date Our Share of Capex Actual Budget Actual US$m Budget US$m (1) Actual cost subject to finalisation. (2) Actual cost subject to budgeted
drilling of wells post-commissioning. |
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Presentation Slide 67 Key net profit sensitivities US$1/t on iron ore price 80 US$1/bbl on oil price 35 US$1/t on metallurgical coal price 25 USc1/lb on aluminium price 25 USc1/lb on copper price 20 US$1/t on energy coal price 20 USc1/lb on nickel price 2 AUD (USc1/A$) Operations (2) 80 RAND (0.2 Rand/US$) Operations (2) 20 (US$m) Approximate impact (1) on FY 2009 net profit after tax of changes of: (1) Assumes total volumes exposed to price (2) Impact based on average exchange rate for the period
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