BHP, Vale Reach $30 Billion Brazil Settlement for Dam Disaster

BHP Group and Vale SA have signed a 170 billion-real ($29.8 billion) settlement with Brazil over the deadly Mariana dam collapse in 2015 at their iron ore joint venture.

The settlement, which includes 38 billion reais, or about $6.7 billion, of money already spent by the companies, is the largest of its kind globally, according to Brazil’s attorney general. It removes a significant legal overhang for the two mining giants, although BHP still faces a parallel class-action lawsuit in the UK tied to the disaster that involves as many as 620,000 people.

Related: BHP Says Claim It Put Profit Over Safety ‘Unjustified’ in Brazilian Dam Collapse Case

The agreement was signed in Brasilia at a ceremony attended by representatives of the two companies, their Samarco Mineracao JV and Brazilian authorities including President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. It follows years of protracted negotiations over reparations and damages from the disaster, when a tailings dam collapsed at Samarco’s mine in southeastern Brazil, unleashing a torrent of waste that killed as many as 19 people and contaminated waterways in Minas Gerais and Espirito Santo states.

Related: Dam Disaster Deal Should Curb Lawsuits Against Vale And BHP, Sources Say

The total includes 100 billion reais in compensation to be paid over two decades to Brazil’s federal government, the states of Minas Gerais and Espirito Santo as well as affected municipalities and communities, in addition to obligations representing about 32 billion reais, including for resettlement, environmental recovery and compensation to individuals.

The outcome represents a win for the Lula government, which took a firmer stance on negotiations after taking office in 2023.

The settlement is also positive for Vale’s new chief executive officer, Gustavo Pimenta, who inherited the task of resolving the Samarco issue when he took over the helm of the Rio de Janeiro-based company. Both Pimenta and BHP CEO Mike Henry attended the ceremony with Lula in Brasilia.

In a speech, Lula said he hoped the mining companies “have learned a lesson.”

“The money that should have been used to prevent the tragedy was used to pay dividends” to shareholders, he said. “What happened in Mariana was a matter of pure irresponsibility.”

Negotiations have been accelerating since April, with the companies and authorities presenting a series of different proposals to a Brazilian court responsible for mediating the talks. The proposed payment will be made primarily by Samarco, with Vale and BHP picking up the remainder.

The payment schedule has been one of the key points of debate, because Samarco itself is expected to be able to contribute more in future years as it recovers production capacity, reducing the burden on BHP and Vale. The companies will start paying 5 billion reais 30 days after the signing, with the largest installment of 7 billion reais to be paid in 2026.

Vale said in a filing Thursday it had increased the total set aside for the disaster to $4.7 billion, while BHP said the agreement was broadly aligned with its $6.5 billion provision for future obligations tied to the dam collapse.

The deal comes about three years after Vale struck a 38 billion reais settlement with Brazilian authorities for another tailings dam collapse near Brumadinho city, in Minas Gerais state, in 2019. That disaster killed 270 people and led to production cutbacks that stripped Vale of its ranking as world’s biggest iron ore producer. At the time, it was the largest reparation agreement ever signed in Latin America.

The settlement also comes days after hearings began in the UK lawsuit, and BHP hopes that resolving the situation in Brazil will help weaken the case. Lawyers for the claimants in English courts said on Friday that the settlement has no impact on the court case.