Full-Time
Posted on 5/14/2026
Global mining and diamond producer
No salary listed
London, UK
Hybrid
Anglo American / De Beers Group is a global mining and resources company that extracts and processes minerals such as gold, diamonds (via De Beers), copper, and platinum. Its products come from mining and processing operations, with De Beers controlling diamond mining and the diamond supply chain from production to distribution. The company differentiates itself through its large, diversified mineral portfolio and integrated operations across multiple commodities and markets, including ownership of a leading diamond brand. Its goal is to be a leading global resources company that responsibly discovers, extracts, and supplies essential minerals that underpin economies and industries.
Company Size
10,001+
Company Stage
IPO
Headquarters
London, United Kingdom
Founded
1917
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Anglo American is breaking water promise, say campaigners. Apr 24, 2026 | Mining Activists from Peru will challenge mining giant Anglo American at its AGM in London next week. Shareholders gathering on 29 April will hear accusations that the UK-registered company is breaking its promise by shelving construction of the Asana dam near its open-pit copper mine, Quellaveco, in Moquegua region. Anglo American committed, back in 2012, to the construction of the 2.5 million cubic metre (90 litres per second) compensation dam to be located upstream from where it diverted the Asana River between 2014 and 2019. But in March this year, during a Quellaveco Monitoring Committee session, the company announced that the dam was "unfeasible" and proposed allocating 120 million soles (about US$35 million) to alternative water-related projects in a different watershed. This generated concern among the local population for whom the Asana dam is a fundamental component to previously established commitments, according to the London Mining Network, which is organising next week's visit by the Peruvian campaigners with the PSG's help. Paul Maquet from CooperAcción, Edwin Alejandro from Red Muqui and Lucio Flores from National Platform of People Affected by Heavy Metals will be trying to hold Anglo American to account at its AGM, which starts at 11 am on the 29 April. Later that evening they will be speaking at a public event about Anglo American's "broken promises", starting at 6.30 pm at University College London, Bedford Way (26) G03, WC1H 0AP. Look here to register and for more information. There will also be speakers from Southern Africa and two new reports on Anglo American, one relating to Quellaveco, will be launched. One of the Peruvian speakers, Lucio Flores, a resident of Moquegua, was in the UK in November 2025 highlighting the impacts of the Quellaveco operation on communities in the area, especially in terms of restricted access to drinking water, increased water scarcity and pollution and the effect this is having on local agriculture and livestock. His testimony focused particularly on the diversion of the Asana River, a turning point that critically affected water availability for local communities. The regional governor of Moquegua, Gilia Gutiérrez Ayala, has also expressed concern regarding delays and non-compliance with several water-infrastructure-related commitments. As a result, several organisations and affected communities have reiterated their demand that Anglo American fully comply with all 26 agreements.
Rethinking legal and institutional frameworks to advance impact investing. 8th April 2026 Font size: -+ The 2026 Budget Speech delivered by Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana in February 2026 has in balance been referred to as a "good news" budget by the commentariat. At a macro level, the strides made toward fiscal consolidation and the raising of the VAT level for small-to-medium businesses are highly positive developments for key socio-economic measures, including employment. Government has been highly consistent in emphasising the importance of small-to-medium businesses as part of its overall national economic growth strategy. Page 39 of the National Development Plan 2030 explicitly states "that most new jobs are likely to be sourced in domestic-orientated businesses, and in growing small- and medium-sized firms." Impact investing: Enabling businesses through commerce and impact At what is a critical juncture for South Africa's economy, a topic that merits significant attention when talking of growth, and driving change and impact is the role of impact investing in growing small-to-medium businesses and driving economic sustainability. Impact investing is closely aligned with ESG principles for sustainable impact. Large corporations are seeking ways to deploy their capital that serve both commercial and impact imperatives simultaneously, guided by relevant industry regulations and statutes. Recently, Anglo American, together with Kumba Iron Ore launched an impact investment facility (with Kumba Iron Ore committing ZAR 51.2-million) aimed at assisting small-to-medium businesses in underserved regions across South Africa. Another player in the impact finance space is Edge Growth which, in collaboration with its various partners, has deployed about ZAR1.75-billion into growing a sustainable ecosystem for small-to-medium businesses. These are some of the examples of how corporates are finding ways to position capital expenditure under the impact umbrella. These moves have been complemented by movement within the public sector, with government making strides towards the growth of impact investment in South Africa through the launch of the National Taskforce for Impact Investing in 2019. President Cyril Ramaphosa noted in his 2026 State of the Nation address that the foundation of the government's plan to revive growth and drive inclusion is investment. In particular, public infrastructure and "labour-intensive growth sectors that are capable of future growth". Government recognises the long-term dividends that can be realised through priority capital investment, which strongly mirrors the core objectives of impact investment and associated ESG frameworks. A further positive signal is the expression of interest by international investors seeking to unlock the value that inhabits South Africa's economy. Legislative gaps: An impact investment inhibitor The potential of impact investing to support the long-term goals of a development-focused state is significant. However, while South Africa's economic growth story may be entering a more positive chapter in 2026/27, from a regulatory standpoint, there remains considerable limitation within South Africa's impact investment regime. South Africa has a well-developed regulatory framework for mainstream investing, anchored by the Companies Act framework, B-BBEE laws, tax laws and the growing consideration of ESG requirements and factors. Yet the absence of a bespoke impact investing regulatory framework, the lapse of key tax incentives, the voluntary nature of sustainability disclosures, fiduciary duty ambiguity, and structural constraints on institutional capital represent significant barriers that limit the scale and effectiveness of impact capital in the country. Attracting meaningful levels of impact investment in South Africa requires a regulatory regime that can adequately protect that investment, one that complements the asset class's dynamism. What this regime should look like, and the legislative and policy adjustments required to create an attractive environment for local and international impact investors are key questions that must be addressed. The current trajectory of both domestic and internal jurisprudence reflects a discernible shift toward greater scrutiny of non-financial representations, such as ESG commitments and sustainability disclosures - and the broader consequences of investment activity; yet these developments remain fragmented and largely reactive. Domestically, the gap is even more striking. Impact-related considerations seldom feature in judicial reasoning, leaving the core features of impact investing only partially understood and inconsistently applied in legal contexts. The result is a system that has not yet caught up with the ambitions of investors seeking to align commercial returns with social and environmental outcomes. If we want impact investing to play the transformative role it is capable of, we need a more deliberate and integrated legal approach, one that recognises impact not as a peripheral concern, but as a legitimate and vital component of investment decision-making. As the market continues to evolve, it will be crucial to watch how jurisprudence responds and to learn from new examples emerging both locally and internationally that may point the way toward a more coherent and future-fit framework.
The news discusses the potential disruption of the Anglo American-Teck merger, suggesting that Anglo American might be an easier acquisition target than Teck. It mentions Anglo's strategic moves, such as relocating its headquarters to Canada and its involvement in a troubled fertilizer mine in Britain. Additionally, Anglo American has significant operations, including a 44% stake in the Los Bronces copper mine in Chile and a historical presence in South Africa.
Teck is a leading Canadian resource company focused on responsibly providing the metals essential for global development and the energy transition while caring for the people, communities and land that we love.
London-based Anglo American is preparing to invest US$25.7mn in its Quellaveco copper mine in Peru's Moquegua region.