Executives to push for mining’s full picture
THE EXPECTED demise of transparency regulations for minerals and oil companies listed in the US will not cloud the global drive for financial clarity in extractive industries, company executives have said at an Africa mining conference.
Efforts to shine a light on payments such companies make to foreign governments are considered key to eliminating graft, conflict and the so-called resource curse, the failure of less-developed countries to translate mineral wealth into wide prosperity.
The administration of US President Donald Trump, however, has begun dismantling such transparency requirements.
Last week the Republican-controlled Congress repealed one such rule and Trump also plans to issue a directive ordering suspension of another that requires companies to disclose whether their products contain “conflict minerals” from a war-torn part of Africa.
But companies with EU and Canadian listings – or which work in countries that have signed up to the voluntary Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) – still have to abide by strict disclosure rules, executives say.
“Over half of our members would fall into this category,” said Tom Butler, chief executive of the International Council on Mining and Metals (ICMM), which represents 23 leading mining companies, said.
He was critical of the Trump administration’s actions, but said they would not derail the broader global push for increased transparency.
“It is driven by investors and other stakeholders and the desire of the industry to maintain its social licence to operate. One way to maintain that is for everyone to see that the taxes and other payments the mining industry makes are applied sensibly to the development of the country.”
Nick Holland, chief executive of Gold Fields, which has a secondary US listing, said companies were not about to start altering their behaviour.
“We’re going the other way irrespective of the legislation. We’re not going to suddenly start doing deals with illegal miners to buy their gold,” he said.
That view is also supported by Vedanta chief executive Tom Albanese, who said transparency built trust: “It allows for Vedanta to have a richer conversation with host governments around the world and makes the job of the chief executive easier in terms of engaging with host governments and stakeholders, which is one of the biggest challenges a mining CEO faces right now.”