Rio Tinto’s A$9.5bn Boyne Smelter Deal is Done, and These 2 ASX Stocks Are the Real Winners

Ujjwal Maheshwari Ujjwal Maheshwari, March 26, 2026

Rio Tinto Boyne Deal: 2 ASX Stocks to Watch

Rio Tinto (ASX: RIO) has struck a landmark deal with the Queensland and Commonwealth governments to secure the long-term future of the Boyne aluminium smelter in Gladstone. The Queensland and Commonwealth governments will each chip in A$1 billion over ten years, while Rio Tinto will underwrite A$7.5 billion in new renewable energy and storage projects across Queensland, bringing the total commitment to A$9.5 billion. The smelter, which has operated since 1982 and supports around 3,000 jobs across the region, will now keep running to at least 2040.

The headlines are focusing on Rio Tinto. We believe the smarter question for investors is who actually builds and supplies all that renewable energy infrastructure.

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Why This Deal Is Bigger Than a Bailout

It is tempting to read this as a government rescue of an ageing heavy industry asset. In our view, that framing misses the real story.

Boyne is set to become one of the world’s first aluminium smelters underpinned by solar and wind power. Rio Tinto has already contracted more than 2.8GW of new renewable power and over 600MW of battery energy storage across Queensland since January 2024. The projects include the 1.4 GW Bungaban wind farm, the 1.2 GW Upper Calliope solar project, and a 600 MW solar and 2,400 MWh battery deal with Edify Energy covering the Smoky Creek and Guthrie’s Gap projects.

This deal also fits a broader pattern. In 2025 alone, the federal government backed Glencore’s copper smelter in Queensland, the Whyalla steelworks in South Australia, and Nyrstar operations in Hobart and Port Pirie. The message is consistent: governments will support critical industrial assets as they shift to clean energy. That creates a long, visible pipeline of renewable procurement. ASX-listed suppliers are well placed to capture it.

The ASX Stocks Positioned to Win

Worley (ASX: WOR)

Worley is a global engineering, project management, and advisory company that works directly on the kind of large-scale energy transition projects this deal will generate. What makes it particularly relevant here is the scale of its decarbonisation exposure. Around 60% of Worley’s FY25 revenue came from sustainability-related projects, up from 52% the year before. That shift is not coincidental. It reflects a deliberate pivot towards exactly the kind of industrial decarbonisation work that the Boyne deal represents. The company reported H1 FY26 aggregated revenue of A$6.3 billion, up 5.4% year on year, with a project backlog of A$16.7 billion providing strong forward revenue visibility. For investors, Worley is one of the most direct ways to play the wave of energy transition engineering contracts flowing through Australia right now. The key risk is that restructuring costs weighed on recent earnings, and margin expansion will need to follow to justify the current valuation.

LGI Limited (ASX: LGI)

LGI is a Brisbane-based clean energy company that converts landfill biogas into renewable electricity and carbon credits. Beyond its core business, the company is actively expanding its battery energy storage portfolio across Queensland’s distribution network. This is important because as the grid absorbs more intermittent solar and wind supply, the need for dispatchable firming capacity grows alongside it. LGI’s Queensland footprint and its expanding BESS pipeline position it as a practical beneficiary of the energy infrastructure wave this deal triggers. The company also generates carbon credits, which adds a second revenue stream that many investors overlook.

Investor’s Takeaway

This is not a one-day news play for Rio Tinto. The real opportunity lies in the years of construction, procurement, and grid integration contracts that flow from A$9.5 billion of committed Queensland investment. For investors, the policy tailwind is strong and clearly backed by the government.

That said, risks are real. Queensland’s planning rules for renewables have tightened recently, which could slow project timelines. Construction cost blowouts are a genuine concern at this scale. For Worley, margin delivery after restructuring is the key thing to watch. For LGI, balance sheet health and project execution matter far more than headlines.

We believe the key thing to watch over the next 12 months is contract award announcements from Queensland renewable projects. Those announcements, not the recent deal signing, will be the true catalyst for ASX investors positioned in this space.

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