Barrick Gold Retreats From Digital Reinvention
07 December 2018 - 1:08AM
Dow Jones News
By Alistair MacDonald and Jacquie McNish
Barrick Gold Corp., the world's largest gold miner, is selling a
research and development company it owns and is cutting staff hired
to lead what executives had called a digital reinvention,
championed by Executive Chairman John Thornton, according to people
familiar with the matter.
The move comes shortly after the company agreed to buy Randgold
Resources Ltd. for $6 billion in an all-share merger -- a move that
would solidify Barrick as the world's largest gold producer by
output.
That merger is set to close next month, and incoming Chief
Executive Mark Bristow has said he plans to sell a variety of
noncore core assets, cut costs and shrink head-office management in
an effort to delegate more authority to regional mining
operations.
One of the first assets to go on the block is Barrick-owned
AuTec Innovative Extractive Solutions Ltd., a Vancouver-based
company that specializes in testing mineral samples and processing,
people familiar with the matter said.
In recent months, Barrick has also disbanded or shrunk
technology based teams at its head office in Toronto and at its
mining operations in Nevada, according to people familiar with the
matter. The teams were launched by Mr. Thornton to develop things
like software that tracked sensors on underground mining staff, or
collected data on processing equipment that could help predict when
maintenance was needed, according to these people. Progress on the
projects had been slow, a senior Barrick official told the media
late last year.
Last month, Sham Chotai, the miner's chief digital officer and a
former Silicon Valley executive, left the company, according to
another person familiar with the matter.
Barrick also cut by around two-thirds its in-house coding hub in
Elko, Nevada, and cut staff at s sister site at Henderson, Nevada,
according to these people. The miner had described Elko as "the
epicenter for Barrick's ambitious digital transformation" on its
website.
Barrick said in September that it was parting with its chief of
innovation, Michelle Ashe. All but three of her Toronto-based team
of 20 have also left the company, according to a person familiar
with the matter.
People working on Barrick's digitization program said that while
the project started well it lacked consistent support at the
boardroom level and funding was soon cut, one of the people
familiar with the matter said.
A Barrick spokesman said in a statement that technology "will
continue to be a key driver" as it looks to shrink corporate
management and evaluate all jobs.
Barrick also recently hired bankers to sell its Lagunas Norte
gold mine in Peru, other people familiar with the matter said. The
company is also reviewing a possible sale of its Hemlo gold mine in
Canada and its 50% stake in its Kalgoorlie mine in Australia, these
people said. Barrick has in the past tried to sell these mines, or
said that it will.
Write to Alistair MacDonald at alistair.macdonald@wsj.com and
Jacquie McNish at Jacquie.McNish@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 06, 2018 08:53 ET (13:53 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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