Difference between revisions of "Glencore"

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(The most opaque mining company of them all)
(The most opaque mining company of them all)
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==The most opaque mining company of them all==
 
==The most opaque mining company of them all==
Piping Profits, published Publish What You Pay Norway in 2011, showed that Glencore was the world's "most opaque mining company." Though the corporation controls relatively few subsidiaries compared to others in the sector - 46 compared to [[Rio Tinto|Rio Tinto's]] 926 - 46% of its subsidiary companies are incorporated in 'secrecy jurisdictions such as the US state of Delaware, the Netherlands or Bermuda. Secrecy jurisdictions are defined as: "places where among many other advantages for companies requiring secrecy, company accounts and beneficial ownership details are not publicly available."<ref name="PWYP" />
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Piping Profits, published Publish What You Pay Norway in 2011, showed that Glencore was the world's "most opaque mining company." Though the corporation controls relatively few subsidiaries compared to others in the sector - 46 compared to [[Rio Tinto|Rio Tinto's]] 926 - 46% of its subsidiary companies are incorporated in 'secrecy jurisdictions' such as the US state of Delaware, the Netherlands or Bermuda. Secrecy jurisdictions are defined as: "places where among many other advantages for companies requiring secrecy, company accounts and beneficial ownership details are not publicly available."<ref name="PWYP" />
  
 
As PWYP state: "This is relevant given that Glencore’s 2010 financial statement confirms that its effective tax rate for its $234m tax bill, ‘was 9.3% compared to 12.6% for 2009’ on revenues of $144.9 billion." Glencore's net profit in 2010 was $4.1bn.<ref name="PWYP" />
 
As PWYP state: "This is relevant given that Glencore’s 2010 financial statement confirms that its effective tax rate for its $234m tax bill, ‘was 9.3% compared to 12.6% for 2009’ on revenues of $144.9 billion." Glencore's net profit in 2010 was $4.1bn.<ref name="PWYP" />

Revision as of 15:22, 30 September 2011

Mining-alcans-60px.jpg This article is part of the Mining and Metals project of Spinwatch
Glencore logo

Swiss-based mining-giant Glencore controls 60% of the world’s zinc, half the world’s copper, 38% of aluminium and 9% of the global grain market. In 2011 it won the dubious award of the world's "most opaque mining company", courtesy of Publish What You Pay Norway (PWYP).[1]

In addition to its own operations, Glencore holds interests in several other major mining companies, including 34.4% in Xstrata, 44% economic (39% voting) in Century Aluminum, 73.4% in Minara Resources, 74.8% in Katanga Mining, 8.8% in UCR, 51.5% in Chemoil Energy and 32.2% in Recylex.[2] Glencore holds a market capitalization of $33bn and was first listed on the London Stock Exchange in May 2011.[1]

The most opaque mining company of them all

Piping Profits, published Publish What You Pay Norway in 2011, showed that Glencore was the world's "most opaque mining company." Though the corporation controls relatively few subsidiaries compared to others in the sector - 46 compared to Rio Tinto's 926 - 46% of its subsidiary companies are incorporated in 'secrecy jurisdictions' such as the US state of Delaware, the Netherlands or Bermuda. Secrecy jurisdictions are defined as: "places where among many other advantages for companies requiring secrecy, company accounts and beneficial ownership details are not publicly available."[1]

As PWYP state: "This is relevant given that Glencore’s 2010 financial statement confirms that its effective tax rate for its $234m tax bill, ‘was 9.3% compared to 12.6% for 2009’ on revenues of $144.9 billion." Glencore's net profit in 2010 was $4.1bn.[1]

Contact

Address:
Glencore International AG
Baarermattstrasse 3
CH-6340 Baar
Switzerland
Glencore UK address:
50 Berkeley Street
London
W1J 8HD
Telephone: +41 41 709 2000
Fax: +41 41 709 3000
Email: info@glencore.com
Website: glencore.com
Facebook: glencore

Resources

Company Fact Sheet

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Nick Mathiason, '[1]', Publish What You Pay Norway, 19 September 2011, accessed 30 September 2011
  2. 'Glencore Fact Sheet', accessed 30 September 2011