Latest News

Rio Tinto Mongolia mine settlement to be approved by US Judge

Rio Tinto Mongolia mine settlement to be approved by US Judge

The U.S. Judge said on Wednesday that he is ready to approve Rio Tinto’s agreement to pay an amount of $138.75 millions to settle a lawsuit in which investors accused the Anglo Australian mining giant of fraud by hiding problems with the $7 billion underground extension of the Oyu Tolgoi Copper and Gold Mine in Mongolia.

Rio Tinto reached a preliminary agreement with the shareholders of Turquoise Hill Resources, which was formerly based in Montreal. The settlement is pending the approval by Manhattan-based U.S. district judge Lewis Liman.

Liman said at an hearing on Wednesday that he is ready to approve the settlement but has not signed off yet. He was waiting to hear from the lawyers of the shareholders what they plan to do with the funds remaining after the initial distributions.

Rio Tinto's settlement agreement did not include any admission of wrongdoing. The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Turquoise Hill's shareholders, between July 2018 and the end of July 2019. At that time, Turquoise Hill, which then traded in Toronto, had been majority owned by Rio Tinto. The majority of shareholders were advised by Chicago's Pentwater Capital Management. Pentwater stated in a court filing on September 10, that the settlement represented between 34% to 43% of damages they believed it would be able to prove at trial. They described it as reasonable, given the risk of continuing litigation.

Turquoise Hill was a single asset company that owned 66% of Oyu Tolgoi, while Mongolian government held 34%. Pentwater claimed that Rio Tinto, Turquoise Hill and others had fraudulently assured them that the Oyu Tolgoi Mine was "on schedule" and "on-budget", despite it being up to two and a half years behind schedule. It was also running $1.9 billion above budget. Rio Tinto announced that it could be over budget by $1.9 billion in 2019 and estimated total capital expenditures between $6.5 billion and $7.2 billion. Rio Tinto purchased the remaining 49% of Turquoise Hills for $3.3 billion in 2022. This fully integrated the mine into the company's copper portfolio. (Reporting by Luc Cohen, Clara Denina, Editing by Alexandra Hudson)

(source: Reuters)