Title: Freeport Indonesia Case Classroom Discussion Guide
1Freeport Indonesia Case Classroom Discussion Guide
- Professor Doug Cerf
- Donald Bren Graduate School of Environmental
Science and Management - Environmental Risk Management (ESM 286)
- Winter 2008
2(No Transcript)
3Two parts to our study of Freeport Indonesia
- Case Analysis
- Answer the questions for the case and draw some
conclusions - Prepare a stakeholder analysis
- We could have done the stakeholder analysis
first, however, I did not want to assign both for
the first class meeting
4Case Issues
- Environmental risk management of a large firm
- The environmental and social issues raised by
modern mining in a developing country - The long term viability of this mining project
- How many resources are allocated to environmental
management? - The appropriate distribution of the economic
rents - Economic rents are the operating profits
- Freeport, Indonesian government, Irian Jaya
people, etc. - Does Freeport need long term mining rights to
protect its enormous capital investment?
5Short Video
- Gold Mine in the Clouds
- Will run before class and during the break and
the small group discussion
6Case questions
- What is your evaluation of Freeport Indonesias
Environmental Management? - What is your evaluation of Freeports treatment
of social and cultural affairs? - Is this project, or could this project be,
sustainable? How should economic rents be
distributed? - Should Freeport expand? Should Indonesia allow
it?
7Small group discussion
- Phase 2 In class, students will be put in
temporary (for the day) teams to discuss the
case. This small group discussion will last
about 20-30 minutes. The goal of the small group
discussion is for students to take their
understanding of the case and its issues to the
next level. During these sessions students
should write notes on their executive summaries
using a blue pen or pencil.
8What is your evaluation of Freeports
Environmental Management?
- What have they done?
- Details will be part of class discussion
9What is your evaluation of Freeports
Environmental Management?
- How much has been allocated for environmental
remediation and management? - What level is appropriate?
- Distributions of Economic Rents (revenues less
operating expenses) - Details on the next slide
10(No Transcript)
11What is your evaluation of Freeports
Environmental Management?
- Current financial statements
- Google finance
- http//finance.google.com/finance?fstypeiiqNYSE
FCX
12What is your evaluation of Freeports
Environmental Management?
- What should they do?
- How proactive should Freeport be with their
environmental risk management strategy?
13Lessons Learned
- How at risk is Freeport economically related to
its environmental risk? - Understanding stakeholders is fundamental to
doing environmental risk management - In particular the strength of the respective
stakeholders (stockholders and environmental
stakeholders) - For a mining company, who dominates?
- The expansion issue
14Lessons Learned
- Freeport misunderstood the need for environmental
management. They were forced to acknowledge. - Freeport does not understand the need for
environmental management for an egregious
business (mining). - Companies have obligations to meet environmental
standards. - Minimum local standards
- Probably World bank standards
- Possibly Home Country Standards
15Study (Stuart Hart, Cornell University)
- Comparison of American firms operating
internationally using - US environmental standards
- (Lower) Environmental standards in country of
operation - Companies using US standards perform better
- Could be a surrogate for good management
- Do corporate global environmental standards
create or destroy market value? Glen Dowell
Stuart Hart Bernard Yeung Management Science
Aug 2000 46, 8
16Lessons learned
- Does Pro-active environmental strategy kills
criticism - Even a mining company can think about
sustainability
17- Excerpt from Below a Mountain of Wealth, a River
of Waste, New York Times, 12/27/05 - http//www.nytimes.com/2005/12/27/international/as
ia/27gold.html
18WALHI report on Freeport-Rio Tinto
- The Indonesian Forum for Environment (WALHI -
Friends of the Earth Indonesia) - the largest forum of non-government and
community-based organisations in Indonesia. - It is represented in 25 provinces and has over
438 member organisations (as of June 2004). - http//www.eng.walhi.or.id/kampanye/tambang/frpt-r
eport-may-06