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    BHP’s iron ore edge: mine planning and product quality lessons for engineers

    February 26, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    BHP’s iron ore edge: mine planning and product quality lessons for engineers

    First reported on Australian Mining

    30 Second Briefing

    BHP chief executive Mike Henry has reaffirmed the company’s iron ore advantage, citing world‑leading EBITDA margins and stronger free cash flow from its Western Australia Iron Ore (WAIO) operations compared with Rio Tinto and Vale. He pointed to sustained low unit costs across BHP’s Pilbara hubs and a high proportion of lump and premium fines products as key drivers of realised price and margin resilience through the cycle. For mine planners and process engineers, the message is continued emphasis on low‑strip orebodies, efficient rail‑port integration and product quality control to defend cost and price premia.

    Technical Brief

    • For other mining operators, the message is that system integration and capex discipline can outweigh sheer volume growth.

    Our Take

    Across our recent coverage, BHP’s iron ore operations in Australia sit alongside a clear strategic pivot towards copper, with a separate piece noting copper has overtaken iron ore as BHP’s top earner by EBITDA; any emphasis on an ‘iron ore edge’ is now being framed against that internal capital-allocation shift.

    The WAIO haul truck upgrade reported on 11 February, which is adding around 1.52 Mt/y of extra iron ore, underpins Mike Henry’s ability to argue for a structural cost and volume advantage in Pilbara-style operations without large greenfield capex.

    BHP’s involvement in Faraday Copper’s C$100 million raise in Arizona, alongside strong performance from its Australian copper division, suggests that iron ore cash flow from Australia is increasingly being leveraged to underwrite a geographically diversified copper growth pipeline.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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