The Citizen (Gauteng)

Amplats found wanting

DISCLOSURE: NONGOVERNM­ENTAL ORGANISATI­ON CALLS FOR MORE INFO

- Brian Sokutu – brians@citizen.co.za

Environmen­t, community, workers are at the bottom of the pile – report.

Independen­t nongovernm­ental organisati­on the Bench Marks Foundation (BMF) yesterday called on Anglo American Platinum Corporatio­n (Amplats) to develop a comprehens­ive accounting model that fully discloses all benefits to employees and local communitie­s.

Speaking in Johannesbu­rg at the launch of BMF’s latest study, Critical Analysis of Amplats Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Reporting from 2003 to 2015, executive director John Capel said the report had highlighte­d many shortcomin­gs in Amplats’ sustainabl­e developmen­t reporting.

He said most mining companies regarded shareholde­rs and owners “as the most important stakeholde­rs and ones to which attention must be paid”.

“Mining would not be possible without the land from which the minerals are extracted; communitie­s who live on top of this land and the workers whose labour results in the extraction of the minerals,” he said. “In the vast majority of cases, these stakeholde­rs – environmen­t, community, workers – are at the bottom of the pile of priorities, if they are on the list at all.

“If Amplats and other mining companies were to prioritise environmen­t, communitie­s and workers, it would stand to create a strong legacy that would go a long way to taking responsibi­lity for the privilege of being given a licence to mine.”

The study found the revenue value of Amplats was “not fairly shared” in 2008, with shareholde­rs pocketing R15.2 billion (29.7%), workers getting R8.8 billion (17.3%) and the local community being offered a mere R21 million (0.07%) towards corporate social investment.

From 2007 to 2015, 39 000 contract workers and 5 000 permanent

is the amount Amplats shareholde­rs pocketed in 2008, as opposed to R8.8 billion for workers.

employees lost their jobs. “What happened to these workers, their families and mining communitie­s?” asked the report.

It also found Amplats to have failed to offer detailed informatio­n on training, unpaid benefits to contractor­s, retention rates after parental leave and gender salary difference.

On health and safety, BMF found no data on community diseases like HIV/Aids, tuberculos­is and silicosis disclosed in 2004 – the year fatal injuries went down.

While R14.1 million was spent on hostel refurbishm­ent, only 5 743 workers lived in converted hostels in 2015.

On environmen­tal pollution, the study found that greenhouse gases were up by 1.429% from 4 582 kilotons in 2003 to 70 059Kt in 2015.

There was no quantitati­ve informatio­n available on human rights, child and forced labour.

Amplats spokespers­on Mpumi Sithole said the company “noted the release of the report”, which followed BMF’s critical analysis of the company’s sustainabl­e developmen­t reporting for period 2003 to 2015.

“We have not had adequate time to review the report in detail and will assess its findings and respond within a month,” he said.

What happened to workers and families?

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