BHP needs 21 000 women to reach gender goal

Published Oct 20, 2016

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Singapore - BHP Billiton wants women to account for half of its workforce by 2025 as the world’s top miner seeks to change the gender balance in an industry dominated by men.

The company isn’t “as inclusive or diverse as we could be”, Chief Executive Officer Andrew Mackenzie said in a statement on Thursday. BHP has a workforce of about 65 000, including contractors, of which 18 percent are female. Based on these numbers, its target would mean an additional 21 000 women employed by the middle of the next decade including both its own staff and contractors, according to Bloomberg calculations.

The $800 billion mining industry has long been a male-dominated business, with women even banned from working underground in some countries until recently. Men hold a majority of executive positions in resources companies, lagging behind other sectors. While the proportion is growing, female directors accounted for only 10.9 percent of miners’ boards on average in 2014, compared with more than 15 percent in consumer goods and services, according to a study by Women in Mining UK and PricewaterhouseCoopers.

“Without new initiatives it would take us 30 years just to get to 30 per cent female representation,” BHP’s Mackenzie said in the statement. “More must, and will, be done. And our 2025 aspirational goal is to achieve gender balance at all levels of the organisation over the next decade.”

Out of BHP’s direct workforce of 27 000, women also account for 18 percent. The company says it’s seeking the target for direct employees and will encourage contractors to mirror the same balance.

Inclusion, diversity

“Opportunities exist to work with our suppliers to align our supply chain processes with our inclusion and diversity aspirations,” BHP said in an email. “We will work together with our supply chain partners to understand where we can create opportunities to support our commitment for inclusion and diversity.”

BHP will feature “counter-stereotypical images” such as women miners and young female leaders in its internal and external visuals, in a bid to attract and retain diverse talent, the company said. It will also seek to mitigate bias in its policies and processes, and develop flexible work options.

Mining companies with gender diversity in their boards outperformed all-male boards in 2014 by 49 percent on the basis of the ratio of a firm’s enterprise value to its proven mineral reserves, according to the study by Women in Mining UK and PricewaterhouseCoopers. All-male boards also showed 92 percent more negative ratings on earnings per share.

Female participation

Separately, Fortescue Metals Group, the world’s No. 4 iron exporter, will begin reporting progress on female participation in its workforce each quarter as it seeks to improve its gender balance, Chief Executive Officer Nev Power told reporters on Thursday. Women currently account for 16 percent of the Perth-based producer’s staff, the company said in a statement.

“We are focused on reviewing all the areas of our business to make sure that we have very inclusive work sites, and that we are creating opportunities for women to participate,” Power said on a conference call. “We are looking at ways of increasing the pool that we have to recruit from, and also improving our recruitment and selection processes.”

BLOOMBERG

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