Key Points
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Copper growth is central to Glencore’s strategy, with executives saying the company’s brownfield projects could lift annualized base copper output above 1 million tons by end-2026 and to 1.6 million tons by 2035.
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Glencore highlighted strong shareholder returns, including a $0.17 per share cash distribution, $2 billion returned to investors, and $1.8 billion in buybacks funded in part by the Viterra sale.
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The AGM also surfaced persistent safety, labor and tailings concerns, as management acknowledged recent fatalities, while shareholders and union representatives pressed the company on worker relations, mine closures and dam safety transparency.
Glencore (LON:GLEN) executives used the company’s annual general meeting to emphasize safety, copper growth plans, shareholder returns and the role of its marketing business, while facing shareholder and stakeholder questions on labor relations, mine closures and tailings safety.
Kalidas Madhavpeddi, chair of the Board of Directors, opened the meeting by saying health and safety remained the company’s top priority. He said Glencore had improved safety metrics, decreased recordable injuries and reduced fatalities. However, he added that the company recorded two fatalities last year and that three colleagues in Kazakhstan died “just a month ago.”
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“Our hearts go out to their families and our colleagues in those locations,” Madhavpeddi said. He added that management, the Health, Safety, Environment and Communities Committee and the board were “laser-focused” on continuous safety improvement.
Company Highlights Copper Growth Plans
Madhavpeddi said Glencore’s December Capital Markets Day outlined what he called a “compelling investment case” and progress in de-risking its portfolio of copper projects. He said the projects are mostly brownfield and expected to be “highly capital efficient.”
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According to Madhavpeddi, Glencore’s base copper business is expected to exceed 1 million tons on an annualized basis by the end of 2026 and reach 1.6 million tons by 2035, positioning the company as “one of the largest copper companies in the world.”
CEO Gary Nagle also highlighted copper as central to Glencore’s strategy, describing it as “the commodity of the future” due to demand tied to data centers, artificial intelligence, the energy transition and broader economic growth. Nagle said the company has “a number of projects” largely in South America and some in Africa that are expected to grow its copper business through “organic brownfield, low-risk, low-capital intensity projects.”
