Latest News

BHP says iron ore production in the third quarter rose, but maintains full-year forecast

BHP Group said on Wednesday that its iron ore production in the third quarter rose by 3%. The miner's outlook for the year was unchanged.

In February and March, two tropical cyclones disrupted Port Hedland's operations, which is the largest iron ore hub in the world. This affected shipments of this key steel-making material.

The largest listed mining company in the world said that iron ore production from its Western Australia mine operations was 69.8 metric tons on a 100 percent basis for the?quarter ending March 31. This is higher than Visible Alpha's estimate of 68.9 metric tons.

Last year, 67.8 millions tons of?tonnes were produced.

The price of the wet metric tonnage steelmaking ingredient has fallen by 2%, from $85.35 per metric ton for the last three months.

The company stated that the 100% iron ore production guidance for fiscal 2026 from Western Australia operations remains at 284 to 296 millions tons.

The quarterly copper production fell 7%, to 476.800 tons. This was due to a weaker performance by the Escondida? and Pampa Norte?operations.

BHP has announced that it has completed iron ore contract negotiations with China Mineral Resources Group.

Earlier this month, it was reported that CMRG (the state iron ore purchaser) had lifted the bans on the procurement of the?key ingredient for steelmaking from BHP. This ended a long-running dispute following a visit by BHP's top executives.

Mike Henry, the outgoing Chief Executive Officer of GE Energy, said: "Our centralised purchasing capability and our low-cost operation have placed us in an advantageous position in the face of industry-wide pressures on the cost energy and consumables due to the conflict in the Middle East."

BHP appointed senior executive Brandon Craig as its new CEO in March, ending Henry’s six-year tenure.

Craig will take over the role on July 1. (Reporting by Sneha Kumar in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)

(source: Reuters)