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CME WOMEN IN RESOURCES AWARDS




The Women in Resources Awards recognise individuals and
organisations working to build a world-class industry which provides
attractive career opportunities and enhances the recognition and
participation of women in the sector.

 

 

2013 Women in Resources Awards

The 2013 CME Women in Resources Awards were presented this morning over breakfast. Coinciding with International Women’s Day, the event was attended by around 800 people.
The Women in Resources Awards recognise individuals and organisations working to build a world-class industry which provides attractive career opportunities and enhances the recognition and participation of women in the sector.

Women's participation in the resources sector is increasing. More women are choosing a career in the resources sector because it provides potential for career advancement, great pay, global travel and a work-life balance.

CME would like to congratulate all finalists and winners for their achievements in the resources sector. Thank you to those who were able to join us for breakfast this morning to celebrate.
The winners are highlighted below. 

2013 Women in Resources Champion
Julie Shuttleworth (Barrick Australia)

Julie Shuttleworth has 18 years experience in the gold/copper mining industry in Australia, China and Tanzania, including 12 years with Barrick Gold Corporation. Julie's career has progressed from Plant Metallurgist, Senior Metallurgist, Process Superintendent, Process Manager to General Manager positions. At age 35 in 2009 Julie became General Manager for Barrick in Tanzania and is currently General Manager at Barrick's Granny Smith Mine in Western Australia.
Julie was 2007 Telstra WA Young Businesswoman of the Year and 2011 Australian Mining Prospect Awards Mine Manager of the Year. She is 2012 Telstra WA Business Women of the Year, and also received the 2012 Nokia Business Innovation Award and Hudson Private and Corporate Sector Award.
Julie has a strong focus on safety, teamwork and positive attitude. She has a positive impact on communities around the mines which she operates. Julie regularly speaks at universities, schools, career-days, and workshops/seminars. She sponsors the Julie Shuttleworth Prize in Mineral Processing at Murdoch University.
Julie believes diversity improves creativity and ideas generation to solve problems, resulting in continuous improvement and greater innovation. Women and other minority groups have different ideas which are often the perfect simple answer to a problem. Again, these ideas improve safety and production.
Finalists in this category:
Kaye Butler (Chevron)
Paula West (Alcoa of Australia)

2013 Outstanding Company Initiative
Chevron – Women in Engineering

Chevron has formed a powerful partnership with Challenger Institute's Australian Centre for Energy and Process Training (ACEPT) to provide women with the skills and confidence to make a successful transition into an engineering career pathway in the oil and gas sector.
A key focus of the course is to provide women with an insight into engineering from a female perspective and to address barriers that might discourage women from entering an engineering career in the resources sector. The initiative is built around the Certificate III in Engineering (Technical) MEM30505 which is the foundation for a range of career, employment and further education pathways in professional engineering or trades.
Participants gain an understanding of engineering career opportunities, develop technical and practical skills for engineering related careers, gain knowledge of engineering design principles, technology and practices and articulate towards employment or higher level qualifications. The program has successfully attracted women from a diverse range of ages and backgrounds to the field of engineering, from school leavers to mature-age mothers, with experience and qualifications in areas far-removed from the world of engineering such nursing and music.
This highly successful initiative has supported a 50% growth in women participating in engineering pathways at Challenger Institute since 2009.

Finalists in this category:
Inclusion Steering Committee - Alcoa of Australia
Fast Track Program - Macmahon and Rio Tinto
Digging for Diversity – Rio Tinto


2013 Outstanding Professional Woman
Vanessa Guthrie (Toro Energy)

Dr Vanessa Guthrie is Managing Director of Toro Energy Limited, a uranium focussed Australian resources company. She is responsible for managing the development of the proposed A$280 million flagship project, including leading the team through significant detailed technical studies and State and Federal Government approvals. Her ongoing role is to lead the establishment of the Wiluna Uranium Project, including construction and commissioning of the mine, processing facilities and infrastructure, and production and export of WA's first uranium product. Toro's Wiluna Uranium Project is the first uranium project to be approved in WA since the change in State Govt policy in Sept 2008.
Vanessa has a Doctorate in geology, with post-graduate qualifications in environment, law and business management. Vanessa has an extensive background in the mining and resources sector, having worked in mining companies across Australia for over 25 years. She was WA's first female mine manager at Alcoa's Huntly bauxite mine at Dwellingup, and led the development of sustainability practice in Alcoa World Alumina Australia and Woodside Energy. She has also held previous roles with RGC, Pasminco, Goldfields Limited and WMC.
Vanessa loves being part an industry that provides essential resources to communities across the world - whether it is gas or uranium for energy, or nickel, tin, aluminium and zinc for everyday items or other precious metals.
Finalists in this category:
Patricia Durance (KalNorth Gold Mines Ltd)
Priscilla Hubbard (Woodside Energy)
Julie Morgan (Woodside Energy)
Julie Shuttleworth (Barrick Australia)
Lucy Stocker (Rio Tinto)


2013 Outstanding Young Professional Woman
Jenna Robertson (Chevron)

Jenna graduated with a Masters of Engineering from Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh and joined Shell as an Operations Process Engineer at Fife Natural Gas Liquids plant in Scotland. Jenna then pursued an opportunity on Shell's Sakhalin Project, at the time the largest integrated capital project in the world, becoming Commissioning Process Engineer on the Onshore Processing Facility in Sakhalin, Russia.
Jenna moved to Perth, WA in 2008 joining Chevron Australia in the Gorgon Project Operations team as a Process Engineer. She worked in the areas of process safety management, process control and simulation and was project manager and lead engineer for the Gorgon Operator Training Simulator project, leading the development of one of the most advanced simulators in the world, presenting this at Chevron's international engineering conference in 2011. Jenna is currently working as Chevron's LNG Operations Business Improvement Coordinator, setting up benchmarking and continuous improvement for Chevron's LNG assets Gorgon and Wheatstone
Jenna is also a classical soprano and opera singer in WA, having performed in 8 opera productions over the last few years, including in leading roles.
Finalists in this category:
Maree Ansey (Leighton Contractors Mining Division)
Lisa Butler (Squire Sanders)
Sarah Coleman (Improvement Resources)
Johanna Cowell (Barrick Australia)
Alana Gallagher (BHP Billiton Nickel West)
Jenna Robertson (Chevron)


2013 Outstanding Technician/Operator/Trade Woman
Jodie Gray (Newmont)

Photo: Jodie (left) accepting her Award from Narelle Hooper.
Jodie Gray joined the mining industry 25 years ago as an inexperienced 17-year-old with a passion to explore WA and carve out a career path for herself. She began work as a blast technician and over the years worked in jobs from green-fields exploration through to open pit production, in the gold, diamond, iron ore, base metals and mineral sands industries. Jodie currently works as a Pit Technician Supervisor at Newmont Boddington Gold.
Jodie has always championed women in the mining industry and has been an enthusiastic promoter of women taking up mining roles. Early in her career, she was promoted to run her own exploration programs and set about developing a skilled workforce of women to employ on contracts throughout WA. She has also established mentoring networks and promoted mining jobs to women wherever her work has taken her.
Jodie’s message to any women wanting to enter mining is to have a go, no matter what your experience.
Finalists in this category:
Rachel Cameron (Downer EDI Mining)
Lisa Mirtsopoulos (Dump Truck Discovery/Newmont)

 


2012 Women in Resources Awards

2012 Winners

Joanne Farrell - 2012 Women in Resources Champion
Margaret Watroba -2012 Outstanding Woman in Resources (Professional/Specialist)
Natasha Cann - 2012 Outstanding Woman in Resources (Trade/Operator/Technician)
Katrina Bukauskus - 2012 Outstanding Woman in Resources (Young Professional/Specialist)
Newmont Boddington Gold - Driving Force (Outstanding Company Initiative)

PROFILES

Profiles of the 2012 Women in Resources Awards Finalists:

Outstanding Technician/Operator/Trade Woman Finalists


Outstanding Young Professional Woman Finalists

Outstanding Professional Woman Finalists

Women in Resources Champion Finalists

 


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