Rio Tinto Plc (RIO) laid out an aggressive growth strategy Thursday at its 2025 Capital Markets Day, promising industry-leading returns while streamlining its focus to four core commodities: iron ore, copper, aluminum and lithium.
The Numbers Behind The Growth Story
For 2025, Rio Tinto revised its production targets upward across several key areas. Copper production guidance now sits at 860-875 kt, a substantial increase from the prior 780-850 kt range. Bauxite output is expected to exceed previous guidance of 59-61 Mt, while aluminum production should land at the top end of the 3.25-3.45 Mt range.
Looking beyond next year, the company is projecting 7% production growth in 2025 and a 3% compound annual growth rate through 2030. The heavy lifting comes from major project ramp-ups: the Oyu Tolgoi copper mine, the Simandou iron ore project, and lithium operations including Arcadium and Rincon.
The financial projections are equally ambitious. Rio Tinto expects EBITDA to surge 40-50% by 2030, driven by 20% growth in copper-equivalent production and what the company calls "disciplined capital allocation." Lithium capacity should hit roughly 200 ktpa by 2028, adding another growth engine to the portfolio.
Cutting Costs And Selling Assets
Rio Tinto isn't just focused on growing production—it's also working to run leaner. The company has already banked $650 million in annualized productivity gains within just three months, thanks to a simplified organizational structure, tighter operational discipline and dumping non-core projects that weren't moving the needle.
The company projects a 4% reduction in unit costs from 2024 through 2030. Capital expenditure guidance for 2028 and beyond should stay below $10 billion as major replacement projects wrap up.
On the asset side, Rio Tinto is targeting an "opportunistic" $5 billion to $10 billion cash release from existing holdings. The company is conducting strategic reviews of its iron, titanium and borates operations, which have now moved into a market-testing phase to gauge buyer interest.
Even the emissions reduction plan got a cost overhaul. Rio Tinto still aims for a 50% emissions cut by 2030, but now expects to spend $1 billion to $2 billion in capital to get there—down significantly from the previous $5 billion to $6 billion estimate.
Recent Production Performance
Back in October, Rio Tinto reported third-quarter fiscal 2025 results showing Pilbara iron ore production of 84.1 million tonnes, essentially flat year over year. Pilbara iron ore shipments on a consolidated basis also held steady at 84.3 Mt for the quarter. The company noted that Pilbara delivered its second-highest third-quarter shipments since 2019.
RIO shares traded down 0.82% at $73.67 following Thursday's presentation.