
Article by Nic Fildes, courtesy of Financial Times
23.06.2025

A host of Australia’s biggest industrial names are appealing for government aid as high energy prices threaten to force them out of business, in a test for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s new Labor government and its relations with business.
Some Australian metals smelters have hit a crisis point over the past year, due to high power bills and volatile commodity prices, with thousands of workers’ jobs at risk.
The latest alarm has been sounded by UK-listed miner Glencore, which has operations in Mount Isa, a historic mining town in Queensland. “A combination of unprecedented smelting market conditions, high costs like energy, gas and labour, and a shortage of copper concentrates is currently making the Mount Isa copper smelter unviable,” Glencore said in a statement on Friday.
Australia’s industry minister Tim Ayres visited the town the same day for talks with Glencore on its requests for state and federal aid and warned: “Any closure of the Mount Isa copper smelter would have a detrimental impact on Australia’s sovereign capability and other facilities downstream that rely on the smelter.”
Meanwhile, the miner Rio Tinto is the largest shareholder in the Tomago aluminium smelter in New South Wales, which uses about 10 per cent of the state’s electricity.
It faces an uncertain future due to surging power costs and the slow pace of the energy transition. The New South Wales Labor government is in talks to intervene, after reports that it could take billions of dollars of public money to bail out the smelter.
Rio has also warned of “material uncertainty” over the future of a hydro-powered aluminium smelter in Tasmania, while a nearby manganese facility owned by Sanjeev Gupta’s GFG Alliance has been seeking a bailout.
In addition, commodities trader Trafigura has said governments should consider nationalising smelters that are struggling to compete with China, after putting its South Australian zinc smelter under review.
One mining company director said the government had an important decision to make on how to support the country’s struggling processing industry, given its agenda to turn Australia into a critical minerals superpower and boost the country’s sovereign capability. “That dream could be dead before it’s begun,” he said.