At NewsTrackerToday we note a decisive strategic shift sweeping through the global mining sector: infrastructure is no longer a core asset to hold but a financial lever used to unlock capital for higher-return commodities. BHP’s decision to sell nearly half of its 85% stake in the Pilbara power network to BlackRock-owned Global Infrastructure Partners, raising around $2 billion, underscores this new calculus. The miner will retain full operational control of the system – including the Yarrnima gas plant and more than 400 kilometers of transmission lines – while freeing capital for expansion in copper, potash and other long-horizon growth segments.
According to NewsTrackerToday financial analyst Liam Anderson, the move reflects a broader trend among major miners: monetizing stable, low-growth utility assets to strengthen exposure to the commodities shaping the next investment cycle. Rio Tinto recently announced plans to release up to $10 billion from non-core assets, and Mineral Resources took a similar path last year, selling 49% of a strategic haul road to Morgan Stanley Infrastructure Partners. The market is increasingly aligned on one conclusion – having access to infrastructure is far more important than owning it outright.
For BHP, the deal with GIP accelerates its ability to redeploy capital into projects expected to dominate the future metals landscape. The company is preparing multi-billion-dollar spending to sustain output at its Chilean copper operations – roughly $13 billion over the next decade – while simultaneously expanding its Canadian potash project. As NewsTrackerToday energy-geopolitics analyst Daniel Wu notes, copper has become the essential resource of electrification, data-center expansion and the global shift toward low-carbon infrastructure. BHP’s forecast of a 70% surge in copper demand over the next two decades helps explain its recent, though unsuccessful, attempts to acquire Anglo American, owner of several major copper assets.
The freed capital also positions BHP to revisit other potential divestments. The company has not said whether it will sell a stake in its 1,000-kilometer rail network, but analysts believe pressure to optimize capital efficiency could eventually place this asset on the table. With annual capex of around $10 billion projected through the decade, BHP is seeking to preserve financial flexibility while pivoting harder into segments with the strongest structural return profile.
From the perspective of News Tracker Today, the transaction is part of a wider realignment across global mining: infrastructure is increasingly shifting to specialized funds, while producers double down on commodities critical to the energy transition. Against this backdrop, BHP is positioning itself not merely to adapt, but to dominate the next era of resource demand.