Mining giant Rio Tinto, who faced criticism for damaging an ancient indigenous site in 2020, faces investor scrutiny again, this time for its water management at two mines.
A group representing UK pension funds, Local Authority Pension Fund Forum (LAPFF), raised concerns about water practices at the Oyu Tolgoi copper mine in Mongolia and an ilmenite mine in Madagascar.
“Rio Tinto already has significant reputational risk stemming from Juukan Gorge, so its water challenges in Madagascar and Mongolia (as two pressing examples) pose a huge threat of further reputational damage,” LAPFF Chair Doug McMurdo told Reuters.
“There is a sense that companies have been greenwashing and that they need to face a reckoning. Shareholder resolutions are a good way to bring that reckoning,” McMurdo said, speaking about companies in general. He stated that water practices in the mining industry were of particular concern constantly.
The pension fund group postponed its resolution until April 2025 after Rio Tinto acknowledged its shortcomings in a December report about its Madagascar site.
Rio Tinto admitted the need for more transparency and fairness in its water management practices.
“We must address these concerns,” Rio Tinto said.