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August 18, 2025

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Australia’s largest airline, Qantas Airways, was ordered by a federal court on Monday to pay a record fine of A$90 million ($58.6 million) for unlawfully dismissing 1,800 ground staff during the Covid-19 pandemic, marking the biggest penalty in the history of the nation’s labour laws.

The ruling by Justice Michael Lee caps a lengthy legal battle that has spanned years and reached the High Court, with the judge describing Qantas’ actions as the “largest and most significant contravention” of the Fair Work Act to date.

“The sheer scope and size, perceived financial benefits, and consequences of the contravention require a minimum penalty” of 90 million Australian dollars, equivalent to US$58.6 million, Justice Lee concluded.

“Any less would not achieve the necessary specific and general deterrence.”

The airline’s share price was down by 0.52% on Monday.

Judge condemns Qantas’ conduct and lack of remorse

In his judgment, Justice Lee said the penalty, set at roughly 75% of the maximum, was designed to ensure Qantas could not treat breaches of labour laws as a mere cost of doing business.

He was scathing of the airline’s approach to litigation and its failure to display genuine contrition for the harm caused to its workforce.

“I accept Qantas is sorry, but I am unconvinced that this measure of regret is not, at least in significant measure … the wrong kind of sorry,” he said.

Lee pointed to the airline’s immediate announcement of an appeal following the 2021 court ruling, issued without proper reflection on the detailed judgment.

He also criticised Qantas for attempting to manage public opinion through press statements while avoiding having its executives, including current chief executive Vanessa Hudson, testify under oath.

“It is one thing for the ‘Qantas News Room’ to issue press releases by a CEO saying sorry; it is quite another for written assertions of contrition, recognition of wrong and cultural change to be tested in a courtroom,” he remarked.

Union celebrates landmark victory

Half of the penalty, A$50 million, will be paid directly to the Transport Workers’ Union (TWU), which brought the case on behalf of the ground staff.

“Against all the odds, we took on a behemoth … that had shown itself to be ruthless, and we won,” TWU national secretary Michael Kaine said after the ruling.

Legal representatives for the TWU welcomed the judgment as a powerful warning to employers.

Maurice Blackburn Lawyers, who worked on the case, described the fine as “record-breaking” and reflective of the “monumental scale of Qantas’ wrongdoing.”

Labour law experts also emphasised the significance of the decision.

Professor Shae McCrystal of the University of Sydney said it signalled a shift in the way courts and unions may respond to unlawful employer actions.

“Adverse action cases are risky … it signals a message to employers that if they break the law, then trade unions may receive those penalties in order to assist them in enforcing the act,” she said in a Reuters report.

Compensation already agreed with sacked workers

The penalty comes on top of an earlier A$120 million settlement reached in December between Qantas and the sacked workers.

That agreement followed a test case ruling which confirmed the company had acted unlawfully in outsourcing 1,820 ground handling roles at the height of the pandemic.

Qantas initially argued that the outsourcing was a commercial decision driven by financial pressures, as travel bans and border closures hammered the aviation industry.

However, the Federal Court in 2021 ruled the move was designed to prevent employees from exercising workplace rights and unionising.

Qantas has since apologised and said it will pay the fine as ordered.

“We sincerely apologise to each and every one of the 1,820 ground handling employees and to their families,” Chief Executive Vanessa Hudson said in a statement.

Qantas’ battered corporate reputation

The fine adds to a series of blows to Qantas’ public standing, which has suffered badly since the pandemic.

Once one of Australia’s most trusted brands, the airline has been mired in controversies over labour disputes, customer service complaints, and regulatory action.

In late 2023, it was embroiled in the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s lawsuit over so-called “ghost flights” and saw the departure of long-time chief executive Alan Joyce.

The fallout contributed to Qantas being ranked the fifth most distrusted brand in Australia in June, according to Roy Morgan research, behind major supermarkets, Facebook/Meta and telecommunications firm Optus.

The company’s troubles were compounded last month when it confirmed one of the country’s largest cyber breaches, with personal data of 5.7 million customers accessed by hackers.

The breach included sensitive details such as addresses, phone numbers, and even meal preferences.

Wider implications for corporate Australia

The record A$90 million fine, combined with the earlier compensation settlement, marks a significant financial and reputational cost for Qantas.

Analysts say it may also reshape employer behaviour across Australia.

Josh Bornstein, principal lawyer at Maurice Blackburn, which represented TWU, said the scale of the fine underscored that even powerful companies could not disregard labour laws.

“This record-breaking penalty reflects the monumental scale of Qantas’ wrongdoing,” he said.

For many Australians, the ruling provides a sense of accountability against a national carrier that has long played an outsized role in the country’s economy and culture.

But whether Qantas can restore its reputation in the eyes of workers, regulators and passengers remains uncertain.

The post Qantas hit with record $58 million fine over illegal staff sackings appeared first on Invezz

Investor Insight

Anteros Metals offers investors exposure to a diversified portfolio of critical and base metal projects in Newfoundland and Labrador, advanced through a proprietary, data-driven exploration approach. By combining high-probability targeting with assets at multiple stages of development, the company reduces exploration risk, accelerates discovery timelines, and positions itself to benefit from the rising demand for metals essential to the global energy transition.

Overview

Anteros Metals (CSE:ANT) is a Canadian junior exploration company focused on discovering and advancing high-value mineral deposits across Newfoundland and Labrador. The company’s 100 percent owned portfolio spans 2,775 hectares and hosts nine commodities, including copper, cobalt, nickel, manganese, zinc, and other metals critical to clean energy technologies and industrial growth. Five of these are designated as critical minerals by the Canadian government, underscoring the strategic importance of Anteros’ asset base.

At the core of Anteros’ strategy is the use of proprietary data science techniques to integrate historical exploration records with modern geoscientific data. This approach enables the company to identify the most prospective targets before committing to extensive fieldwork, reducing costs, shortening timelines and increasing the probability of discovery. The portfolio is deliberately balanced across the exploration cycle – from early-stage prospecting at Hopedale to advanced exploration at Knob Lake – ensuring a continuous pipeline of projects that can move toward development while maintaining investor exposure to new discovery potential.

Anteros’ operations benefit from Newfoundland and Labrador’s long history of mineral production, a supportive regulatory framework and established infrastructure. The company’s focus on high-grade, infrastructure-accessible deposits provides strong economic leverage, while its experienced leadership team, with over a century of combined exploration, mining, and financial expertise, is well equipped to execute on its growth strategy. By combining technological innovation with geological expertise, Anteros Metals is positioned to deliver long-term shareholder value through discovery, development, and strategic partnerships.

Company Highlights

  • Four 100 percent owned properties in Newfoundland and Labrador targeting critical and base metals including copper, cobalt, nickel, manganese, zinc and others vital to green technologies.
  • Flagship Knob Lake iron-manganese project: advanced exploration stage with historical resource; strategically located near Schefferville, Québec, and adjacent to major iron ore infrastructure.
  • Havens Steady VMS project: new 2025 sampling confirms the prospectivity and strike extension potential of the Main Mineralized Zone; road accessible and situated in a proven polymetallic district.
  • Strickland project: seven mineralized zones with significant silver-lead-zinc and gold potential; located near the Hope Brook gold deposit.
  • Hopedale Project: nickel-copper-cobalt focus, 80 km south of Voisey’s Bay, with untested EM conductors and unexplained geochemical anomalies.
  • Portfolio spans early to advanced exploration stages, ensuring a steady pipeline of project advancement and diversified commodity exposure.
  • Leadership team with over a century of combined experience in exploration, mining and financial markets.

Key Projects

Knob Lake

Located within the Western Labrador Trough, just 2.5 km south of Schefferville, Québec, Knob Lake is Anteros’ flagship advanced exploration project. This superior-type iron deposit is hosted in the Sokoman Formation, a geological unit well known for high-grade direct shipping ore (DSO) potential, often exceeding 60 percent iron.

Historical work includes 2,746 metres of diamond drilling, which delineated a resource estimate of 5.08 million tonnes grading 54.7 percent iron (measured and indicated) and 643,800 tonnes grading 51.5 percent iron (inferred)1. Although this estimate is historical in nature, it underscores the scale and quality of the deposit, which remains open along strike and at depth.

The property’s proximity to Tata Steel’s Timmins mine and other past-producing operations, along with direct rail, road and port access, gives it excellent development potential. Recent digital modelling and geophysical surveys have further refined high-grade targets, paving the way for future resource expansion and economic evaluation.

¹This historical mineral resource estimate is from a Technical Report entitled Technical Report: Schefferville Area Phase I DSO Iron Projects Resource Update, Western Labrador – NE Québec, Canada by Maxime Dupéré dated June 27, 2014 and is filed on SEDAR (www.sedar.com). The Technical Report was prepared in accordance with National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects (NI 43-101), NI 43-101F1, and with CIM standards and Mineral Resource best practices. The independent QP believed project data was suitable for mineral resource estimation at that time. The stated resource uses an iron cut-off grade of 50%, and grades were not capped. An independent Qualified Person will be required to compile and validate historic Property data, model the data, and estimate the mineral resource to obtain a current mineral resource. It is envisaged that this will involve open pit optimization. A qualified person has not done sufficient work to classify the historical estimate as a current mineral resource. Anteros Metals Incorporated is not treating the historical estimate as a current mineral resource.

Haven Steady

Situated 40 kilometres southeast of Buchans in the Central Newfoundland Gold Belt, Havens Steady is within a proven volcanogenic massive sulphide (VMS) district renowned for its polymetallic potential. The property is road accessible and has been the focus of 8,048 metres of historical drilling, which identified long intersections of continuous mineralization, including 97.7 metres grading 9.2 g/t silver, 0.33 percent lead, 1.57 percent zinc, and 0.04 percent copper and 68 metres grading 11.8 g/t silver, 0.55 percent lead, 1.45 percent zinc, and 0.09 percent copper.

In 2025, Anteros’ exploration program significantly advanced the project with a series of high-impact discoveries. Boulder prospecting of a historic copper-in-soil approximately located approximately 200 metres along strike from the modelled deposit returned assays as high as 0.22 g/t gold, 21.3 g/t silver, and 2.17 percent copper while sampled outcrops in the main zone returned assays as high as 1.56 percent Pb, 9.60 percent Zn, 0.15 percent Cu, 45 g/t Ag, and 0.37 g/t Au.

Channel sampling of broad mineralized surface outcrop commenced in July. Collectively, these results confirm the grade and expansion potential of the deposit and highlight Havens Steady as a prime candidate for follow-up drilling aimed at defining a large, high-grade VMS system.

Strickland

Strickland lies in the Central Newfoundland Gold Belt, a region with prolific epithermal gold and VMS deposits. The property features seven mineralized zones with a combined strike length exceeding 2 km. The mineralization is hosted within submarine felsic volcanic units, providing predictable horizons for efficient exploration.

Historical drilling of 7,857 meters has delineated zones with significant grades, including a historical mineral inventory of 260,000 tons at 195 g/t silver and 5.25 percent lead-zinc in the Main Zone². Historical assays from quartz veins report gold grades up to 17.9 g/t gold, emphasizing the property’s epithermal gold potential.

Proximity to the mining infrastructure of the Hope Brook gold deposit bodes well for potential synergies of Strickland. Proposed exploration activities include advanced geophysical surveys, trenching and targeted drilling to define and expand the resource base.

²The resource inventories described are considered ‘historical’ in nature as defined by National Instrument 43-101, and do not conform to CIM Resource Classification Definitions. The historical estimate was reported by D.R. Prince in a 1981 Falconbridge Nickel Mines Ltd. report entitled “Summary of Work Performed from 1977 to 1980 on the Strickland-Porter Fee Simple Property, Newfoundland”. A qualified person has not done sufficient work to classify the historical estimates of the Strickland Deposit as current mineral resources. As a result, Anteros Metals Incorporated is not treating these historical estimates as current mineral resource estimates, but believes that these historic results provide an indication of the potential of the property and are relevant from a continuing exploration perspective.

Hopedale

In Labrador, the Hopedale property spans 20 sq km and is located 80 km south of the world-class Voisey’s Bay mine. The project targets magmatic nickel-copper-cobalt mineralization along the Churchill-Nain Suture Zone, a structure known for hosting globally significant deposits.

The property is underlain by troctolitic rocks intruded by northeast-trending gabbro dykes, a geological setting highly favourable for disseminated nickel-copper-cobalt sulphide mineralization. Historical stream sediment sampling revealed anomalous nickel, copper and cobalt values in proximity to untested electromagnetic conductors, suggesting strong potential for new discoveries. As a greenfield project, Hopedale represents a high-potential critical minerals opportunity, with upcoming exploration focusing on high-resolution geophysics to identify priority drill targets.

Leadership Team

Trumbull Fisher – CEO

A seasoned professional with 17 years of experience in mining and capital markets, Trumbull Fisher has successfully led multiple resource companies and brings a wealth of expertise in project generation and financing. Fisher has grown both private and public resource companies in roles as chairman, president, board member and advisor. Fisher holds a BA from Carlton University.

Alan Rootenberg – CFO

With over 35 years in corporate finance, Alan Rootenberg’s extensive knowledge ensures Anteros maintains its strong financial foundation. Rootenberg holds a CPA, CA designation and has extensive experience in mineral and oil and gas exploration, serving as chief executive officer, chief financial officer and director to publicly listed companies.

Wesley Keats – Strategic Advisor

Wesley Keats has 22 years of experience in the metals industry, having worked privately and for major and junior mining companies across seven countries. A fourth-generation prospector in Newfoundland, he is a partner of Planet X and VP of Exploration at Anteros. Keats is a co-recipient of the PDAC Bill Dennis Award for significant prospecting success.

Bill Kennedy – Director

Bill Kennedy is a second-generation prospector with 12 years of experience in exploration-centric business operations and development in Newfoundland and Labrador, and has over 20 years of experience in information technologies. Blending his passion for tech and mining, Kennedy continues to pioneer data science systems for mineral target vectorization.

Chris Morrison – Director

Chris Morrison has experience in the operation of multiple corporations, mining sector marketing and communications, and capital markets. Morrison is the marketing manager for Planet X Exploration and multiple public client companies, and the principal of SJ AV Studio – a digital multimedia audio/visual production facility focused on mining sector press and marketing material curation and distribution.

Emily Halle – Director

Emily Halle is co-founder, geologist, and managing director at Halle Geological Services. She holds degrees in commerce and geology, is a certified PMP, and has over 20 years of mineral exploration experience. She serves on the board of the Mining Association of Nova Scotia and is a Fellow of the Society of Economic Geologists.

This post appeared first on investingnews.com

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy reiterated on Sunday that Kyiv will not surrender any territory to Moscow, pushing back against mounting international speculation about potential land-for-peace negotiations. 

‘The constitution of Ukraine makes it impossible to give up territory or trade land,’ Zelenskyy said during a press conference at the European Commission on Sunday. 

He added that Russia has repeatedly tried and failed to seize the entirety of the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine for a period of 12 years. The Donbas, which includes Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, is an industrial hub, with coal mining and steel production central to Ukraine’s economy.

‘Since the territorial issue is so important, it should be discussed only by the leaders of Ukraine and Russia at the trilateral [talks with] Ukraine, United States, Russia,’ Zelenskyy said.

The Ukrainian leader, who spoke alongside EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, said that so far the Kremlin has ‘given no sign that the trilateral will happen.’ 

‘With regards to any territorial questions in Ukraine, our position is clear: international borders cannot be changed by force. These are decisions to be made by Ukraine and Ukraine alone, and these decisions cannot be taken without Ukraine at the table,’ von der Leyen said.

Their remarks came after Russian President Vladimir Putin’s meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump in Alaska on Friday, during which the Russian leader outlined conditions for ending the war, including demands for control over parts of eastern Ukraine.

Following the meeting with the Russian leader, Trump signaled that Zelenskyy should take Putin’s deal to end the war because ‘Russia is a very big power’ and Ukraine is not. Still, SSecretary of State Marco Rubio dismissed claims that Trump would pressure Zelenskyy to give up large swaths of its sovereign land to Russia.

‘The president has said that in terms of territories, these are things that Zelenskyy is going to have to decide on,’ Rubio told Maria Bartiromo on Fox News’ ‘Sunday Morning Futures.’

‘All the president is trying to do here is narrow down the open issues,’ Rubio said, adding that Trump is focused on ending the Kremlin’s war in Ukraine.

‘You can’t have a peace deal between two warring factions unless both sides agree to give up something. And both sides agree that the other side gets something. Otherwise, if one side gets everything they want, that’s not a peace deal. It’s called surrender. And I don’t think this is a war that’s going to end anytime soon. On the basis of surrender,’ Rubio said.

Zelenskyy said he hopes the upcoming meeting with European allies and Trump ‘will be productive,’ contrasting it with the heated Oval Office exchange during his February visit.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS