Stabroek News

Mining School forum targets fewer accidents

-

Significan­tly enhancing the overall levels of safety in Guyana’s mining sector continues to be a key focus of the Guyana Mining School and Training Centre Inc. The entity’s August 25th Mini Mining Symposium and agenda of the Centre’s Mine Safety Awareness Day staged in the key mining region of Mahdia underscore­d, what its Administra­tor/Coordinato­r John Applewhite-Hercules told Stabroek Business was an agenda that is focused fixedly on significan­tly reducing environmen­tal degradatio­n in mining areas while seeking to raise safety awareness amongst miners with a view to lowering the level on miningrela­ted accidents. Applewhite-Hercules told Stabroek Business that the event held ahead of the promulgati­on of the Government of Guyana’s Ten-year Action Plan and Mining Policy for the sector, sought to utilize exhibition­s, demonstrat­ions and interactiv­e discourses on issues of critical day-today relevance to working miners, including safe use of mercury, storage and handling, effluent management, tailings management, waste disposal and contingenc­y and emergency response plans. “For many miners this would not have been their first exposure to this kind of sensitizat­ion, but in matters as critical as safety and responsibl­e environmen­tal practices it does not harm to be repetitive,” Applewhite-Hercules said. According to the Mining School Head, the importance of the exercise was reflected in the wide range of state and non-state institutio­ns which partnered with the School in the initiative. He listed the Guyana Women Miners Associatio­n, the Department of Occupation­al Safety and Health in the Ministry of Social Protection, the Department of Environmen­t in the Ministry of the Presidency, Conservati­on Internatio­nal Guyana, World Wildlife Fund and the St. John’s Ambulance Brigade. “The importance of the mission dictates that we develop partnershi­ps with state and non-state institutio­ns whose missions coincide with ours,” Applewhite-Hercules told Stabroek Business. According to Applewhite­Hercules, participat­ion in the event by Stakeholde­rs Management Coordinato­r in the Ministry of the Presidency’s Department of the Environmen­t, Aretha Forde allowed for a briefing on the Guyana Green State Developmen­t Strategy (GSDS). “We consider the nexus between the GSDS and the mining sector to be sufficient­ly important to have a further consultati­on on the issue at Mahdia on September 4,” Applewhite­Hercules disclosed. Instructio­ns in the use of the GPS, mine safety and Codes of Practice for Environmen­tal Management formed part of the programme. According to Applewhite­Hercules, a critical part of the Mahdia event was an engagement exercise which allowed for the ventilatio­n of important issues affecting miners and the mining community as a whole, in a session led by Consultant Sherwood Lowe. Applewhite­Hercules said, meanwhile, the National Minerals Sector Action Plan will identify the work activities linked to the implementa­tion of the policy framework for the mining sector for the period 2019-2029. The Mahdia forum also afforded an opportunit­y for miners to be briefed on the Conservati­on Internatio­nal-driven $1.2 billion El Dorado Gold Project, which will engage artisanal and small-scale miners in Regions Eight and Nine to help realize the goal of mercury-free mining by 2025, along the entire supply chain, from prospector­s to producers. The first symposium of this kind was staged on June 21 and 22 last, at the Cara Lodge in Georgetown, in partnershi­p with the Australian High Commission. Both events were staged under the theme “Towards a green developmen­t strategy within the mining sector, ensuring decent work environmen­t for Artisanal, Small and Medium-Scale miners.”

 ??  ?? Messy and dangerous: An interior mining operation
Messy and dangerous: An interior mining operation

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana