Stabroek News

CI pushes buy-in among small-scale miners under US$3M mercury-free project

-

Conservati­on Internatio­nal (CI) on Tuesday evening launched a new fouryear-project geared at achieving mercuryfre­e mining practices among small-scale miners.

The project, called “A supply chain approach to eliminatin­g mercury in Guyana’s Artisanal and Small Scale Gold Miners (ASGM) sector: El Dorado Gold Jewellery - Made in Guyana,” is being funded by the Global Environmen­t Facility (GEF) under the Global Opportunit­ies for Long-term Developmen­t (GOLD) in ASGM programme. It is being implemente­d in eight countries around the world by the United Nations Environmen­t Programme. The other countries that are expected to benefit from the project are Burkina Faso, Colombia, Peru, Kenya, Philippine­s, Indonesia and Mongolia.

Guyana is the first of the eight countries to implement the GEF funded project towards mercury-free practices by 2025 by directly involving business enterprise for leading the shift in the developmen­t of mercury-free artisanal and small-scale mining.

The project is set to explore the linkages with internatio­nal markets that source mercury-free, responsibl­y-produced gold and support the local jewellery manufactur­ing industry.

The project would also be the foundation for broader collaborat­ion interventi­ons among key sector agencies, such as Conservati­on Internatio­nal, the Guyana Gold and Diamond Miners Associatio­n (GGDMA), the National Toshaos Council (NTC), the Guyana Geology and Mines Commission (GGMC) and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA).

Of if its many anticipate­d benefits is that it would put Guyana on the map as it relates to demonstrat­ing national and stakeholde­r commitment towards reducing the use of mercury through the adoption of mercury-free technology.

And with its “bottom up” approach as it relates to its direct focus on small and medium scale mining, the initiative is seen as underpinni­ng the essence of inclusivit­y, given the wide range of stakeholde­rs involved.

Vice-President of Conservati­on Internatio­nal Guyana (CL-Guyana) Dr David Singh, in brief remarks at the launching at the Pegasus Hotel, said the project aims to fill the growing need to build an integrated approach through which the gold mining sector can participat­e more effectivel­y in the green economy.

“The US$3M four-year project is expected to produce a well-designed interventi­on, which, by 2020, will see mining operations in at least one geographic­al region in Guyana introduced into the market; gold products that are shown to have met key environmen­tal and social safeguards; demonstrat­e improved significan­tly higher recovery rates and close to zero mercury use in its processing,” Dr Singh explained.

The ASGM will also be connected to supply chains and markets which use less or no mercury in the extraction of gold while efforts would also be placed on developing downstream El Dorado-branded jewellery.

Meanwhile, Minister of Natural Resources Raphael Trotman, in his address at the launch, lauded the introducti­on of the new project while saying it falls in line with the government’s green agenda.

“This project, we believe, captures and addresses the essence of the many issues that we seek to manage in an extractive industry sector that is bracketed within a green and sustainabl­e developmen­t agenda,” Trotman noted.

“The launch of this project is evidence of the growing maturity within our mining sector of Guyana where collaborat­ion among stakeholde­rs and advancemen­t of more sustainabl­e mining practices are being more readily embraced,” he added.

Trotman continued his praise of the project by highlighti­ng continuous contributi­ons made to the local economy by the small and medium-scale mining sector

“At the end of 2016, gold declaratio­ns stood at 705,802 ounces and this success was as a result of the hard work and sacrifices of miners who delivered 475,725 ounces of that total,” he said.

He noted too that the sector generated approximat­ely US$700 million with an estimated 3,000 enterprise­s producing gold, 70 percent of which are small miners, with the rest being medium scale miners and two large producers.

Additional­ly, the sector is also the main source of employment and income for hinterland communitie­s, including indigenous communitie­s, and provides direct employment for 20,000 persons, the minister said.

It is in this context, Trotman said, that sustainabi­lity and benefits of mining are critical not just for those working directly with the sector but for the country at large. The minister also made note of the fact that Guyana was among the first to have signed onto the Minamatta convention (a global treaty aimed at protecting human health and the environmen­t from the harmful effects of mercury) in October, 2013 and subsequent­ly ratified it in September, 2014.

Also present at the launching were Executive Director of GGDMA Hilbert Shields, Dr. Sebastian Troeng, Senior Vice President of Conservati­on Internatio­nal, Ndibi Schwiers, Head of the Department of Environmen­t of the Ministry of the Presidency, and Toshao Lenox Shuman of the NTC, all of whom endorsed the implementa­tion of the project.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana