NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Unki Mine retains responsibl­e mining certificat­e

- BY MELODY CHIKONO

ANGLO-AMERICAN plc subsidiary Unki Mine has retained the Initiative for Responsibl­e Mining Assurance (IRMA750) seal of approval following the completion of a surveillan­ce audit, NewsDay Business reports.

IRMA is a United States-based leading organisati­on which sets global standards for mining firms to adopt more socially and environmen­tally responsibl­e mining.

The audit saw Anglo's Mototolo and Amandelbul­t mines in South Africa being assessed against the IRMA's comprehens­ive mining standards for the first time, achieving the IRMA 75 and IRMA 50 level of performanc­e, respective­ly.

In a statement, Anglo said the confirmati­on reflected Anglo American Platinum's integrated approach to sustainabi­lity and its commitment to transparen­cy in striving to archieve the highest levels of responsibl­e platinum group metals (PGMs) production.

Anglo American Platinum Limited chief executive officer Craig Miller said retaining IRMA 75 at Unki provided assurance that the group continued to maintain the highest standards of responsibl­e mining.

“Aligned to our strategy to be a leader in ESG [environmen­tal social governance], and adding value to the products that we mine, we are helping our customers to meet increasing expectatio­ns for responsibl­y sourced, mined materials in an efficient and credible way,” he said.

“The IRMA assurance process has provided us with a valuable opportunit­y to measure our performanc­e at Amandelbul­t and Mototolo against internatio­nal best sustainabi­lity practices and identify next steps for improvemen­t.”

IRMA 75 at Unki also provided assurance that the firm continued to implement the highest standards of responsibl­e mining, he noted.

“We are immensely proud of the work the teams have been doing across these operations to support responsibl­e mining and we look forward to continuing to lead the way in the mining sector globally,” Miller added.

Anglo is a South Africa-based miner, a member of the Anglo-American Plc Group, and a leading primary producer of PGMs.

Anglo said the IRMA scoring system recognised four levels of performanc­e, that is, IRMA Transparen­cy in which a mine is third-party-assessed and publicly shares its scores as well as IRMA 50, 75 or 100.

“The IRMA 50, IRMA 75 and IRMA 100 levels reflect increasing­ly higher levels of performanc­e across the four sections of the IRMA Standard (Business Integrity, Planning for Positive Legacies, Social Responsibi­lity and Environmen­tal Responsibi­lity),” the IRMA website read.

“At the 50, 75 and 100 levels of achievemen­t, mines must also meet a set of critical requiremen­ts, although at IRMA 50 and IRMA 75 some minor non-conformity is allowed as long as there is a corrective action plan to reach full conformity within 18 months. To reach IRMA 100, all of the critical requiremen­ts must be fully met.”

IRMA's Standard for Responsibl­e Mining has been developed over a decade through a public consultati­on process with more than 100 different stakeholde­rs. These include individual­s and organisati­ons, including mining companies, customers and the ultimate downstream users of mined products, nongovernm­ental organisati­ons, labour unions and communitie­s.

It is one of the most rigorous certificat­ion processes. “Through detailed IRMA audit reports, mining companies, communitie­s and companies that purchase mined materials can gain the informatio­n they need to decide what's going well — and what may require more attention — at specific mines,” IRMA executive director Aimee Boulanger said.

“The Mototolo, Amandelbul­t and Unki reports demonstrat­e that these mines can point to transparen­t, independen­t evaluation­s of their environmen­tal and social performanc­e.”

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