LONDON, Sept 16 (Reuters) – Former Rio Tinto boss Tom Albanese has taken on a senior advisory role at Indian mining group Vedanta just eight months after being ousted as chief executive of the world’s No. 3 mining group.
Albanese was one of several top mining chief executives who took the blame for their companies’ relentless pursuit of growth during the boom years that ended in 2011, and for acquisitions that soured and turned into billions of dollars of writedowns.
He is the only one to have returned to a full-time role at a major mining group, albeit a smaller one. Out of the world’s top six miners, only one still has the same chief executive as it did at the beginning of 2011.
Albanese, who held the top job at Rio for almost six years, is now chairman of Vedanta Resources Holdings, a subsidiary wholly owned by the oil and gas and mining group. He will act as adviser to both the operations and the main group board, providing advice on everything from operational troubles and expansion to reputational concerns and relations with investors.
It was unclear what weight Albanese would have in a company almost 65-percent controlled by its founder and chairman, Indian scrap dealer turned metals tycoon Anil Agarwal.