Kitimat smelter survives capital spending cuts at Rio Tinto
Mining giant will trim capital spending by 20% a year, with deep cuts to aluminum production
The head of Rio Tinto's global aluminum business says it will complete the modernization of its Kitimat smelter in British Columbia but will pull back on capital spending around the world.
Rio Tinto plans to cut capital spending by at least 20 per cent in each of the next two years. For 2014, spending would fall to US$11 billion from $14 billion this year. By 2015, it will be reduced to $8 billion.
Rio Tinto, which bought Canadian aluminum operation Alcan in 2007 for $38 billion, is shutting its money-losing Gove alumina refinery in Australia’s Northern Territory and pulling back on aluminum investment around the world.
It aims to save $1 billion a year on costs in its aluminum operations, CEO Sam Walsh said during a company investor meeting in Sydney, Australia.