Mining giant BHP Billiton says it will defend itself against a class action lawsuit in Australia over Brazil's 2015 dam disaster.

The collapse of a dam at a Samarco mine killed 19 people and led to Brazil's largest environmental disaster.

The Samarco mine is jointly owned by BHP and Brazil's Vale.

More than 3,000 investors have signed up to the lawsuit, lodged in the Federal Court of Australia in May.

The claim alleges that BHP failed to disclose the risk of the dam's failure to the stock market, and misled investors over the company's safety guarantees.

The action from Australian law firm Phi Finney McDonald will seek to recover shareholder losses.

The claim estimates more than A$25bn (£14bn; $18bn) was wiped off BHP's market value in the month following the November 2015 tragedy.

The Anglo-Australian miner's stock prices fell by 22% on the Australian Securities Exchange, and by 23% on the London Stock Exchange and Johannesburg Stock Exchange.

"Given the share price fall and the high volumes of shares traded, we believe it a very significant claim," principal lawyer Brett Spiegel told the BBC.

BHP is also facing a US shareholder class action over the disaster, as well as ongoing criminal and civil cases in Brazil.

Last month, the company reached a deal with Brazilian authorities to push back a $47.5bn civil lawsuit for two years while both sides negotiate a settlement.

The collapse of the dam, which had carried contained waste from the nearby iron ore mine, caused a deadly mudslide which flattened several small communities and polluted a river.