Top dog: BHP, Rio Tinto and the pursuit of political power
There’s much at stake if one company can steal a march over the other in winning access to projects, taxpayer funded grants or shaping policy to their whim.
There was a 24-hour period in late July that summed up the vastly different way that two of Australia’s most influential corporate players were wielding power.
Rio Tinto chief Jakob Stausholm had just named the Albanese government’s carbon policy as the trigger for wiping more than $1 billion off the book value of two alumina refineries in Queensland – when he launched into praise for the policy.
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