The Star Early Edition

Australian PM backs probe into iron ore fall

- Matt Siegel and Sonali Paul

AUSTRALIAN Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Friday threw his support behind a proposed Senate inquiry into the economic impact of a slump in the price of iron ore, ratcheting up pressure on top producers Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton.

Leading independen­t senator Nick Xenophon on Thursday pulled a vote that could have launched an inquiry into the impact of the price collapse on government revenue and to consider whether action is needed to ensure healthy competitio­n in the sector.

Xenophon postponed the vote to June 16 due to a lack of support in the upper house Senate. He now appears to have successful­ly garnered that support from Abbott.

“I think we do need an inquiry,” Abbott said. “Certainly I think we do need to know the facts of what’s going on here because I am conscious of the claims that are being made by Andrew Forrest and others.”

The iron ore price slump has caused a A$20 billion (R189bn) loss in government revenue in the past year and the fiscal 2016 budget released this week hinges on iron ore fetching at least $48 a ton over the next year. The iron ore price hit $46.70 a ton in April, its lowest in a decade, although it picked up to around $61 last week.

Top producers

Top producers Rio Tinto and BHP have been flooding the market with iron ore, which has left smaller, high-cost producers struggling to survive.

Xenophon’s call for a probe coincided with the opening of a new front in a campaign by billionair­e Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest, founder of Fortescue Metals Group, Australia’s number three iron ore producer, against bigger rivals Rio and BHP.

Fortescue has created a website called Our Iron Ore (www.ourironore.com), looking to drum up support for his war on Rio and BHP, the world's second and third-largest iron ore producers respective­ly.

“Iron ore is Australia’s most important single export earner and a dramatical­ly falling price is putting significan­t pressure on current and future living standards of all Australian­s,” the home page says.

It echoes what Forrest has repeatedly said this year, without naming BHP and Rio.

I think we need an inquiry. Certainly I think we do need to know the facts of what’s going on here.

“Multinatio­nal companies are failing to act in an economical­ly rational way, choosing to oversupply the iron ore market in the medium term,” it says.

The site urges the public to “join the campaign” by signing a petition, but a link does not lead to any petition so it is unclear what people would be putting their name to.

Rio and BHP declined comment about the website.

Although an inquiry was not the most effective use of the government’s limited resources, it would help to shine a critical light on Forrest’s claims, said Brendan Pearson, chief executive of national mining lobby the Minerals Council of Australia.

“A focus on facts rather than rhetoric will enable a rational considerat­ion of the importance of free and open markets and the dangers of interventi­ons in favour of selected producers,” he said. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? A digger loads iron ore. Australia’s government is losing billions in revenue due to the metal’s price slump.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG A digger loads iron ore. Australia’s government is losing billions in revenue due to the metal’s price slump.

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