Scottish Daily Mail

Rio chief paid £7m despite caves blast row

- By Francesca Washtell

RIO Tinto’s ousted boss was handed a 20pc pay rise last year – and could be in line for millions more, despite losing his job after the miner destroyed sacred Aboriginal caves.

Jean-Sebastien Jacques made £7.2m in 2020 – the most in a single year since he became chief executive in 2016.

The bumper pay packet came even as his cash bonus was docked and £1m was taken off a lucrative long-term bonus plan following the blasts in Western Australia. It takes the total amount the French businessma­n earned during his tenure at Rio to £24m.

But campaigner­s and investors poured scorn on the bonus – and the fact that he is still in line to receive up to £28m in the future through share plans – saying it ‘cast doubt’ on the mining giant’s apologies for the disaster. Rio sparked global outrage last May after it blew up two 46,000-year-old caves in the Juukan Gorge to expand an iron ore mine – giving it access to an extra £103m worth of high-grade material.

The two rock shelters showed evidence of being occupied for thousands of years by the local Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura (PKKP) people and archaeolog­ists had told the firm of their value. The PKKP were left devastated by the destructio­n, describing it as ‘soul-destroying’.

The explosions were legal under Western Australia’s heritage laws and the plans had been made before Jacques, 49, took over. But the decision to go ahead has prompted a wide-ranging re-evaluation of how mining companies interact with Aboriginal communitie­s. Rio also bungled its response, with Jacques (pictured) failing to make a public apology for two weeks after the event. After months of negotiatio­ns with communitie­s and shareholde­rs Jacques and two other executives were ousted in September. However, Jacques did not leave until the end of December. He could have earned around £13m last year if Rio had hit all of its performanc­e targets and he had not had any pay docked. But because he stood down in ‘mutual agreement’ with the board and was deemed a ‘good leaver’, he is still eligible to receive shares worth another £28m at current prices over the next few years. In addition to the £7.2m, he will also take home £519,000 for his remaining five months of unworked notice period in 2021, and £215,000 for his unused leave.

The board defended this move because of his ‘considerab­le achievemen­ts’ during his time at Rio.

The final pay packet was slammed by Australian investor group the Australasi­an Centre for Corporate Responsibi­lity. James Fitzgerald, its general counsel, said it ‘casts doubt over Rio Tinto’s various expression­s of sorrow and regret’. He added: ‘If Jacques had any shame or decency he would donate his payout to an Aboriginal charity.’

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