Business Standard

India to have gold sourcing standards for refiners

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- RAJESH BHAYANI

India is planning its own standards for gold refiners. Known as Indian responsibl­e mineral sourcing guidelines, these are being worked out on the lines of rules set out by the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD).

In the first phase, norms for dore, or unrefined gold, will specify that it is not imported from mines that use child labour or if money is used for terrorist funding or illegal or antination­al activities.

The first meeting of the working committee for the guidelines decided the regulatory model would be in line with the London Bullion Market Associatio­n, with government oversight.

“Aligning with the OECD due diligence guidance, the internatio­nal benchmark, will ensure that the Indian responsibl­e mineral sourcing guidelines are recognised in other markets and meet the expectatio­ns of banks, customers, and clients based overseas,” said Tyler Gillard, head of the responsibl­e business conduct unit, investment division, directorat­e for financial and enterprise affairs, OECD. He attended the working committee meeting.

“The OECD guidance is flexible and can be adapted to specific market characteri­stics in India, as has been done in London, Dubai and China. This flexibilit­y includes adapting approaches to build on existing checks on imports of bullion and gold dore,” he added.

After dore import norms by refiners are complied, India will have standards for gold refineries. India needs separate norms because 25,000 tonnes of gold are held by households in the country and the rules must take into account old gold that is sold in the market. Once these norms are in place, India should be able to export gold.

“The government should at some point in time consider allowing export of gold bars refined by Indian refineries after the country implements responsibl­e gold sourcing guidelines,” said Rahul Gupta, director, Bullion Federation.

The Bullion Federation, which constitute­s refiners, has read through the draft guidance and has provided its feedback. This will be the starting point for the responsibl­e sourcing guidelines.

“It is now up to the Indian industry to work together and develop the Indian guidelines, and more importantl­y, a robust audit mechanism. We encourage any audit of refiners to be overseen by a group of industry associatio­ns,” Gillard said.

Refineries importing gold will be audited by auditors trained by experts and mostly the big accounting firms shall conduct them. The Bureau of Indian Standards has asked bullion refineries to register with it by May 2018.

“The government could play a key role in ensuring a level playing field for refiners by eventually requiring them to go through this industry-led responsibl­e gold audit, so that everyone in India plays by the same rules,” Gillard added.

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