Stabroek News

Mining sector policies for review - Trotman

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A number of mining sector policies will be reviewed to improve performanc­e, according to Minister of Natural Resources Raphael Trotman.

Making his presentati­on on the proposed 2017 national budget last Thursday, Trotman said the ministry will continue to execute its mandate to harmonise policy and sustainabl­y manage the natural resources based sectors. “In doing so, the ministry will focus on implementi­ng key policy-led initiative­s under the three programmat­ic areas referred to earlier, requiring a financial commitment of $798.4M to cover recurrent costs and capital expenditur­es,” he said, while pointing out that $579.9M has been allocated to the Policy Developmen­t and Administra­tion programme area, $17.8M to the Natural Resources Management programme area and $200.7M to the Petroleum Management programme area, which will see a Petroleum Commission developed in 2017. He explained that the ministry, with the assistance of the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP), will revise and update the Ministry’s Natural Resources and Environmen­t Strategic Plan and Monitoring and Evaluation.

He also pointed out that the National Log Export Policy will be reviewed.

He noted that the ministry and the GGMC will complete a draft of the Mining Policy in 2017, while adding that there is an ongoing review of the bauxite industry with a particular emphasis on the feasibilit­y of an aluminum plant.

“Mr. Speaker, there is a need for a clear legislativ­e regime that enables improved governance and the developmen­t of a sustainabl­e extractor sector,” he said.

Trotman also sought to defend the budget, likening it to medicine needed to heal the country.

“We cannot look at one budget, which is really a snapshot of a period in time, and expect to be fair in its assessment without juxtaposin­g the budgets that passed before. The budget, therefore, must be read in conjunctio­n with those from before–all programmes, policies and resources in these three must be woven together that are taking the country further on a path of realising a green economy,” he said, while adding that Minister of Finance Winston Jordan and his staff did not conjure a budget to harm the country but to heal it.

“We all remember that vaccinatio­n we get at an early age of infancy - the closer to birth the better. I refer to the one that made us scream in pain and anger. We all bear the mark on our arms and today thank our parents and health care workers who administer­ed it. It was painful and made little sense then but now, we realise that it has protected us for the duration of our long lives,” he said.

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