Wrap Text
BHP Group Plc
Registration number 3196209
Registered in England and Wales
Share code: BHP
ISIN: GB00BH0P3Z91
17 October 2019
To: Australian Securities Exchange cc: New York Stock Exchange
London Stock Exchange JSE Limited
BHP GROUP PLC ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING SPEECHES
Please find attached addresses to shareholders to be delivered by the Chairman and the Chief
Executive Officer at BHP Group Plc's Annual General Meeting today in London.
The meeting will be webcast at https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/xj8zupub
As part of the Dual Listed Company structure of the Group, the business to be conducted at the
Annual General Meetings will be determined by polls. The poll results will not be known until the
conclusion of BHP Group Limited's Annual General Meeting which will be held in Sydney, Australia
on 7 November 2019. The results will then be released to the market.
Further information on BHP can be found at bhp.com.
Rachel Agnew
Company Secretary
BHP Group Limited ABN 49 004 028 077 BHP Group plc Registration number 3196209
LEI WZE1WSENV6JSZFK0JC28 LEI 549300C116EOWV835768
Registered in Australia Registered in England and Wales
Registered Office: Level 18, 171 Collins Street Registered Office: Nova South, 160 Victoria Street
Melbourne Victoria 3000 Australia London SW1E 5LB United Kingdom
Tel +61 1300 55 4757 Fax +61 3 9609 3015 Tel +44 20 7802 4000 Fax +44 20 7802 4111
Members of the BHP Group which is headquartered in Australia
BHP Group Plc Annual General Meeting
Speeches by Ken MacKenzie, Chairman
and
Andrew Mackenzie, Chief Executive Officer
17 October 2019
BHP Group Plc Annual General Meeting
17 October 2019
Ken MacKenzie, Chairman
Introduction
Good morning ladies and gentlemen. I would like to welcome you to the BHP Group Plc
Annual General Meeting. It is always a pleasure to be here in London to engage with our
shareholders.
I am joined on stage today by your CEO Andrew Mackenzie, and all of your Directors. I
would like to give a special welcome to our new Board members, Ian Cockerill and
Susan Kilsby, who joined us in April. I will talk more about Ian and Susan a little later.
September marked two years since I became Chairman of BHP. In that time, my first
impressions of this Company and its people have only been reinforced. I remain
impressed by the quality and scale of BHP's assets, the contribution we make to the
communities in which we operate, and the role we play in global economic development.
The expertise and discipline of the people at BHP is highlighted to me each time I visit a
site or office. They are committed to making a real difference, to their teams, to the
communities where they work, and to BHP.
I am also proud of our management team. Because of their efforts, BHP is:
- simpler - with a portfolio focused on high quality assets in the right commodities;
- stronger - with a robust balance sheet, which gives us more financial flexibility;
- more efficient - through a relentless focus on productivity; and
- more disciplined - with a rigorous and transparent capital allocation process.
Their commitment to our strategy has delivered significant value and returns. This,
coupled with stronger commodity prices, allowed us to declare a record final dividend of
78 cents per share - or US$3.9 billion in total. That is on top of the US$17 billion we
returned to shareholders last financial year.
While we remain cautious in the short-term, we are positive about the long-term outlook.
We are confident that our portfolio is well positioned to seize the opportunities that will
come from population growth and better living standards, and trends such as
electrification and decarbonisation. These are all likely to increase demand for our
products well into the future.
In light of this global backdrop, BHP is well placed to create value for shareholders and
we will do this by focusing on the five priority areas we introduced two years ago: safety,
portfolio, capital discipline, capability and culture, and social value.
Safety
The safety of our people remains our first priority. Tragically, in December, our colleague
Allan Houston died in an incident at BMA's Saraji Mine in Queensland. I offer my
condolences to Allan's family, friends and colleagues. For the first time in 15 years, we
were not able to determine the definitive cause. However, our investigation identified a
number of improvement areas and work is underway to implement these.
Last financial year, our Total Recordable Injury Frequency rose slightly to 4.7 per million
hours worked. However, we reduced the rate of events with the potential to cause a
fatality by 18%, which is a critical indicator of future safety performance. We are
encouraged by this, but we know there is still much more work to do.
The collapse of the Brumadinho tailings dam, owned by Brazilian company Vale, was a
tragic event for the industry this year. Unfortunately, we know too well the toll these
events take on communities.
Earlier this year, we responded to a shareholder request for information on our own
tailings storage facilities and we held investor briefings in Sydney and London to talk
openly about how we manage our facilities. We remain committed to play our part in
ensuring that a tragedy like this never happens again. Tailings dams and their
management remain a key priority for the Board. Andrew will outline our efforts in more
detail shortly.
Portfolio
The second priority area relates to BHP's portfolio. We are in a strong position today.
Through a series of well-timed divestments and the demerger of South32, we have
simplified our portfolio to five core commodities, in 13 assets, with the majority of our
earnings generated in low-risk OECD countries.
These assets are low cost, produce high quality products and have strong development
potential. We also have a set of attractive options within our portfolio across a range of
commodities and geographies.
We are confident our portfolio is true to our strategy. We are in the right commodities
and have the best assets to deliver value to shareholders in the short, medium and long
term.
Capital discipline
The third priority is capital discipline. In recent years, we have made significant progress
on strengthening our Capital Allocation Framework. The Framework helps us to direct
capital between investments, the balance sheet and cash returns to shareholders, like
dividends.
Guidance for capital expenditure remains below US$8 billion for the 2020 and 2021
financial years. We finished the year with net debt of US$9.2 billion, which sits
comfortably at the low end of our targeted range.
In October last year, we completed the sale of our Onshore Petroleum assets. Net
proceeds of US$10.4 billion were quickly returned to shareholders through a
combination of an off-market buy-back in December 2018, and a special dividend in
January 2019.
With the approval of the Ruby oil and gas development in Trinidad and Tobago, we now
have six major projects under development in iron ore, copper, oil and potash. All of
these are on schedule and on budget.
Capability and Culture
We have also worked hard to strengthen our culture and our capabilities.
In 2019, we continued our transformation focus on simplification, workforce capability
and technology. Our transformation efforts will make BHP safer and our operations more
efficient and predictable. They will also develop our people so that they are equipped for
the rapid pace of change that lies ahead.
An example of this is our maintenance team at the Daunia mine in Queensland. Last
year, they reduced the average monthly scheduled downtime of their haul trucks from
four hours to just 80 minutes. When applied across the entire fleet, this saves around 23
days each year.
This example of continuous improvement, when replicated by all our teams, across all of
our assets, will be a powerful value creation tool. Transformation, coupled with a lean
and agile management culture, has the potential to unlock billions of dollars of value in
the next decade.
This year we also expanded our Board capability.
As I mentioned, we welcomed two new directors - Ian Cockerill and Susan Kilsby. Ian
has extensive mining experience in executive, strategic, operational and technical roles.
He also has considerable public company board experience.
At the same time we appointed Susan Kilsby, who has extensive experience in finance
and strategy, having held several roles in global investment banking. Susan also has
considerable public company board experience and, until recently, was the Chairman of
Shire plc.
Both Ian and Susan are welcome additions and complement the existing mix of skills,
experience, diversity and tenure on the Board.
Carolyn Hewson, a Board member for over nine years, is retiring as planned. On behalf
of shareholders, I want to thank Carolyn for her dedicated service and leadership. She
has made a valuable contribution to BHP during her time on the Board and we wish her
the very best for the future.
Social value
Our fifth priority is social value. Social value is our contribution to society, to our people,
partners, economy, environment and local communities. It is not something we do in
addition to our core business. Rather, it is an essential precondition to adding
shareholder value.
The long-term interests of BHP are best served by considering much more broadly our
range of key stakeholders than we have in the past. If we don't have the trust and
support of our stakeholders, we won't succeed.
Part of the trust that builds social value comes from transparency. That is why we're
proud to share that in FY2019, our total direct economic contribution was $46.2 billion.
This includes payments to suppliers, wages and employee benefits, dividends to
shareholders, and taxes and royalties to government.
To maximise our impact, we consider social value throughout the value chain, from our
local operational footprint to our impact on society more broadly. We continue to focus
on local businesses through initiatives such as the Local Buy program to support the
communities where we operate.
And we take a global perspective on issues that impact our business. This year, we
announced measures to address global warming, including a five-year $400 million
Climate Investment Program. This approach is fully supported by the Board and Andrew
will elaborate on these measures shortly.
Conclusion
In conclusion, we have made good progress on all five priority areas in FY2019. Our
unwavering discipline and commitment have delivered strong results and record
dividends to shareholders.
We have a clear strategy in place to maximise the value of our assets and a
transformation program to drive continuous improvement and build the capability we
need for the future. Our approach to Social Value is essential and directly linked to our
business case.
I am confident BHP can continue to create value for our shareholders in the short,
medium and long term. Thank you again for joining us today. It is now my pleasure to
invite Andrew Mackenzie to the podium.
Andrew Mackenzie, Chief Executive Officer
Welcome
Thank you Ken. Welcome to today's meeting. It's always a great opportunity to speak
with our shareholders here in London.
As Ken highlighted, in the 2019 financial year we announced a strong set of results, built
on simplification, capital discipline, and culture. This combination places us in great
shape to weather any external volatility and seize the many opportunities we have
created to grow value and returns for our shareholders.
Safety
As always I will begin with safety. The health, wellbeing, and safety of our people and
the world, is, and always will be, our first priority. It is with great sadness that last
December our colleague Allan Houston died at BMA's Saraji Mine in Queensland.
Allan's death impacts us all and is a stark reminder of why safety will, and must, remain
at the forefront of what we do and why we have shared the improvements identified in
the fatality investigation widely both internally and externally.
We believe that a zero fatality workplace is possible and we will do all we can to achieve
that outcome. In the 2019 financial year we made strong progress against our four safety
priorities.
- One, we launched the contractor management framework to give all contractors
the same access to safety tools and processes as our employees.
- Two, our leaders spent more time in the field coaching as part of the Field
Leadership program which institutionalises these practices.
- Three, we launched a new software solution tailored to our requirements by our
Technology team. This is a common platform to gather and analyse safety data
across the company, accessible and user friendly to employees and contractors,
which builds on our leadership position in enterprise-wide systems.
- Lastly, we did more work to create a culture of chronic unease. This delivers a
heightened safety awareness which urges us all to question assumptions around
safety and make sure all issues are addressed quickly.
In June, in addition to our safety priorities, we established a Tailings Taskforce.
Immediate focus areas include actions to reduce the consequences and likelihood of
dam failure. We have removed significant numbers of people who worked in closest
proximity to dams. And we have built new standalone structures or buttressed existing
structures, and conducted more rigorous drills, to protect those whose duties require
them to remain in the general vicinity. And we have applied technology to eliminate
tailings altogether.
Our work in tailings has further expression through our engagement in industry
associations like the ICMM and MCA.
At a time of increased focus on local solidarity, protection, and intervention, in response
to increased insecurity and global changes, it's our participation in industry associations
which can contribute to the more global solutions also required for a more progressive
world.
For example, I lead a task force across the mining industry, and its supply chains, to
make our vehicles greener and safer. This typifies the vast bulk of the work of all the
trade associations we join and we work tirelessly to make sure this kind of work is their
major and predominant role.
Mining trade associations, especially, deserve our full engagement. The move to
renewables demands a multi-fold increase in the production of metals in the decades
ahead, which makes mining one of the most vital components of our low carbon future.
Purpose
Our approach to social value builds trust with society, inspires our workforce and unlocks
more of their discretionary effort. It secures greater access to both low-cost capital and
the best talent. When we create more social, as well as financial value, we deliver even
better outcomes for shareholders.
So we have changed our company purpose to reflect the aspirations of all who work with
and count on BHP - our shareholders, our workforce, communities, customers, suppliers
and debt-holders. Our purpose is now to bring people and resources together to build a
better world.
An example of our purpose in action is how we work with our communities on issues
such as dust, and the wellbeing of Indigenous Peoples whose land is adjacent to, or
includes, our mines. Our investment and focus on these important matters builds trust
with the rest of society and our value chain and secures our role as a preferred business
partner.
Our gender balance goal coupled to our strong anti-harassment measures is another
example. As we and many others elsewhere have found, sites and teams with greater
diversity and inclusion are both safer and more profitable. Our commitment to gender
balance is why I signed the CEO Statement of Support for the United Nations Women's
Empowerment Principles. The Principles guide actions that the business sector can take
in the workplace, marketplace, and community, to empower women for the benefit of
every company and the World.
At both a local and global level our new purpose captures our intent and signals our
determination to make contributions throughout society. This will help us deliver even
greater value and returns to shareholders in the short, long, and very long term.
Sustainability
The environmental challenges we face today are complex, and demand concerted and
collective action. We accept our responsibility to take action on global warming and
reduce our greenhouse gas emissions. Our operational emissions came in at 33% better
than our FY2017 target baseline and we are on track to cap 2022 emissions at or below
2017 levels.
We have committed to a new climate portfolio analysis in 2020. This will outline our
plans to mitigate and adapt to global warming and will include a 'well-below 2 degrees'
scenario.
We launched a five-year, US$400 million Climate Investment Program to assist delivery
of our public targets for our operational emissions (scope 1 and 2), and to work with
others across our supply chain to address scope 3 emissions that come from the
transport, processing, and use of our products.
Our Scope 3 goals, to be presented in 2020, will be designed to measure our impact and
align with the goals of the Paris Agreement. Unlike the control that we can exercise in
our operational environments, we can't mandate that our customers reduce their
emissions. But we can collaborate with them and suppliers, and other partners, to drive
actions that reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the major uses of our products
throughout our value chain.
This work will include partnerships for the development of carbon capture utilisation and
storage in industrial applications such as steel. Another example could be the
identification of a battery technology with the potential to not only lower the cost of power
storage for renewables, but also to create greater demand for our commodities.
Our goals will be built around these types of activities and focused on outcomes that
make a material difference. Finally, we also plan to strengthen the link between
emissions performance and executive remuneration, to further reinforce the importance
of sustainability to our leadership.
In the 2019 financial year we also made good progress to reduce loss of wildlife and
species and impacts to water resources. We launched a Water Stewardship Position
Statement which outlines our vision for a water-secure world by 2030. We will improve
water conservation within our business and collaborate with others to strengthen water
governance beyond our operations.
We have invested in and worked with Chilean power companies to secure exclusively-
renewable power to create and pump, at low cost, desalinated water which is now the
predominant water used at our mines in the country. This led to the transition from coal-
fired to renewable power without significant transitory use of natural gas, higher energy
prices, or issues with reliability.
As part of global decarbonisation similar moves from coal, more or less directly, to
renewables may be required over the coming decades in other countries - particularly
those without access to cheap gas.
Financial performance and portfolio
Our 2019 financial year performance was strong. We delivered record cash returns to
shareholders. Higher prices and a solid underlying performance contributed to EBITDA
of US$23 billion at a margin of 53% and strong operating cash flows. After disciplined
investment we converted this into free cash flow of US$10 billion. Over the year our
return on capital employed, excluding shale was 18%.
Across our major assets over the past five years, BHP's volumes were up 10%, and unit
costs down by over 20%. In that same period our WAIO business has increased
production by 20% and reduced costs by 50%. We are now the lowest cost iron ore
producer.
We enter the 2020 financial year with a positive outlook for our business. We have a
simplified portfolio of world-class assets and a strong balance sheet. Our six major
projects are on track and on budget in iron ore, copper, oil and potash (and like our
operations, our project management benchmarks are world-class).
We have exploration licences in the world's top basins with options for future
development that have enjoyed recent competitive discoveries. And finally, a greater
focus on the capability of our workforce.
Transformation
We have invested in our people, our Centres of Excellence, and in innovation to create a
culture and workforce that is more empowered than ever and ready for the future. We
have decided to convert more of our contractor workforce to full time employment so
they are more fully enrolled in our culture, our approach to safety, and more productive
ways of working.
This gives them greater security of work and pay, increases access to training,
apprenticeships and ultimately more career opportunities. We have also introduced a
new approach to risk management, which simplifies the assessment of risk and causes
everyone from the front line, to the Board, to adopt a more optimal level of risk for the
returns we seek.
Ken mentioned a great example of reduced maintenance hours in Daunia that saved 23
days per year. Tangible examples like this are now prevalent across the company. Using
the principles of the BHP Operating System at Peak Downs in Queensland, the Mobile
Maintenance Team has reduced the time it takes to complete an engine module change
in a haul truck from nine days to less than two.
Our transformation work has already driven greater operational and capital productivity
and will do so well into the next decade. Since 2015 we have sustainably reduced
functional overheads by more than US$1.5 billion. The continuation of our
Transformation programs which includes World Class Functions will remove an
additional US$500 million.
We expect to continue this trend through further evolution of our workplace culture and
technology. This, along with our push for gender balance, has driven new ways of
working that make optimal use of office space and increase the global connectivity,
motivation, and productivity of all our people.
Future demand/ trade tensions
While our foundations are strong we remain conscious of the geopolitical
landscape. Current trade tensions are weighing on consumer confidence and have the
potential to impact demand for our key commodities.
With our strong balance sheet, low cost operations, and successful Capital Allocation
Framework we are confident that we are well positioned to weather any future volatility.
Longer term our view remains positive. Industrialisation and urbanisation, along with
decarbonisation and electrification, will generate demand for energy, metals, and
fertilisers for decades to come. We are confident we have the right assets, in the right
commodities, to meet this demand.
Conclusion
We have made significant progress this financial year and we have strong
momentum. However there is more we can do to maximise value for shareholders, and
match our risk appetite to the returns we seek.
Our Transformation program will standardise the way we work and deliver more stable,
competitive, and predictable operations.
Together with our culture, purpose and commitment to social value, transformation will
also lift our workforce's capability and creativity and rally our efforts toward a common
goal.
This, combined with our strong set of development options across a range of
commodities with attractive fundamentals gives us confidence we have the settings right
to grow value and returns, next year and well into the future.
Thank you.
The Chairman then conducted the formal items of business.
Sponsor: UBS South Africa (Pty) Limited
Date: 17/10/2019 11:30:00
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