CORRECTED-UPDATE 1-Rio Tinto to spend $216.5 mln to fund Ranger uranium mine rehab costs

Kitco Media
By Reuters
Published:
Updated:
Reuters
(Corrects paragraph 2 to state that Rio Tinto is majority shareholder of the mine's owner and operator, not the mine's operator; corrects paragraph 7 to state that the target of the protests was the mine and the Jabiluka project, not Rio Tinto.) April 4 (Reuters) - Rio Tinto said on Tuesday it would buy A$319 million ($216.54 million) worth of shares in Energy Resources of Australia (ERA) to help fund rehabilitation costs related to a former uranium mine in the Northern Territory. Rio Tinto, the majority shareholder in ERA which owns and operates the Ranger mine site, has been under pressure to fund the cleanup costs. The site is surrounded by the Kakadu national park rainforest. Rehabilitation costs are estimated at A$1.6 billion to A$2.2 billion, ERA said in a statement.


ERA is hoping to raise up to A$369 million via an entitlement offer, with Packer & Co and Zentree Investments Ltd also expected to contribute to the capital raising. Even if the offer is fully subscribed, ERA will need another A$210 million to A$756 million to fund the remaining rehabilitation cost, the company said, adding that it was likely to miss its January 2026 rehabilitation deadline. "We are committed to ensuring the critical rehabilitation of Ranger is completed to a standard that will establish an environment similar to the adjacent Kakadu National Park," said Rio Tinto's chief executive for Australia, Kellie Parker. The uranium mine and the planned development of the nearby Jabiluka uranium concession were the target of some of the biggest environmental protests across Australia in 1998, including an eight-month blockade and 500 arrests, after the local Indigenous Mirarr people opposed them. The Australian government documented more than 200 environmental incidents at the mine between 1979 and 2003. ERA will issue shares at a price of A$0.02 apiece under the entitlement offer, representing a 90.2% discount to the stock's last close of A$0.205. ERA shares declined 9.8% to A$0.185, their lowest since June 2022, while the benchmark index was marginally higher. Rio Tinto's voting power in ERA could increase to up to 89.1% from 86.3% now following the completion of the capital raising. ERA will also use the proceeds to partly repay a A$100 million loan from Rio Tinto.


($1 = 1.4732 Australian dollars) (Reporting by Harish Sridharan in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)

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