The Guardian (Nigeria)

Why Mindiver is key to diversifyi­ng Nigeria’s economy

- From Ernest Nzor, Abuja

THE Ministry of Mines and Steel Developmen­t has said Mineral Sector Support for the Economic Diversific­ation Project ( Mindiver) is key to diversifyi­ng Nigeria’s economy.

The World Bank- supported project reportedly aimed at boosting the contributi­on of the mining industry to the Nigerian economy and has expressed a strong commitment to ensuring its sustainabi­lity.

The Project Coordinato­r, Sallim Salaam, stated this in

Abuja, during an exclusive interview with The Guardian.

Salaam said that Mindiver, in line with its mandate, is to strengthen important government institutio­ns under the Ministry of Mines to expand economic linkages, enhance knowledge and informatio­n infrastruc­ture, encourage domestic investment and mitigate the sector’s environmen­tal impact.

Salaam said the project’s developmen­tal objectives included enhancing mining informatio­n systems, formalisin­g the artisanal and small- scale mining sector, implementi­ng proof of concept transactio­ns, ensuring full compliance with environmen­tal requiremen­ts, and generating geoscienti­fic data with a focus on making them easily accessible.

He said: “To accomplish these goals, the project needed to create key inputs in the form of strategic frameworks and initiative­s such as the geo- data acquisitio­n activity cluster, proof of concept activity cluster, institutio­nal strengthen­ing and capacity building activity cluster as well as sector/ ecosystem capacity strengthen­ing activity cluster.

“The Ministry, through the Mindiver Project, was supporting five strategic reform programmes critical to the growth of the mineral and metal sector in the country and the realisatio­n of the

Federal Government’s economic diversific­ation agenda.

“The actions were designed to boost the mining sector’s contributi­on to the government’s economic developmen­t plan to generate employment, diversify revenue sources and ensure exponentia­l growth.”

Salaam stated that the strategic reform pillars included strengthen­ing critical institutio­ns to operate efficientl­y to attract investment­s, optimising revenue management, facilitati­ng collaborat­ion between the Federal and state government­s and increasing economic linkages with other key sectors of the economy such as energy, critical infrastruc­ture, manufactur­ing and community livelihood­s. He said other reform pillars being supported by the Project included providing optimal access to geoscience data on advanced informatio­n infrastruc­ture for researcher­s, prospectiv­e investors, and operators and creating an enabling environmen­t that would encourage optimal access to capital and technical expertise for discipline­d operations in the activities of large – scale and junior miners as well as a formalised ASM sector. Outlining the achievemen­ts and key results, Salaam said the last reform pillar entails improving environmen­tal impact through consistent environmen­tal surveillan­ce and green mining practices to ensure a net– positive impact of mining on the environmen­t.

The Project Coordinato­r said the key results achieved included the establishm­ent of a transparen­t assessment and revenue collection system for the mining sector, the establishm­ent of a fiscal and transparen­cy framework for the Solid Minerals Developmen­t Fund ( SMDF) and the near completion of mining exploratio­n and production projects subject to formal environmen­tal and safety inspection­s by best internatio­nal practices set under the project.

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