The Borneo Post

DR Congo’s faltering battle against illegal cobalt mines

- Emmet Livingston­e

SHABARA, DR Congo: Five thousand diggers pack tightly together at the bottom of a crater in southeaste­rn DR Congo, swinging hammers and picks to prise chunks of speckled bluegold ore from the earth.

In this scene of almost biblical toil, the prize is cobalt – a strategic metal found in abundance in the impoverish­ed central African nation.

But the huge pit in Shabara, about 45 kilometres from Kolwezi, is also emblematic of a headache.

Around 20,000 people work at the mine, in shifts of 5,000 at a time. The mining has been carrying on for years in flagrant violation of DRC laws and in defiance of the site’s owner, a subsidiary of mining and commoditie­s giant Glencore.

As the diggers gouge at bluetinged soil, hundreds of dustcovere­d porters trudge up a ramp leading out of the pit, their backs bent under the weight of sacks of ore.

Marcel Kabamba, 31, taking a break amid the sounds of clanging and the shouts of his fellow diggers, said he could make the equivalent of US$200 on a good week – a small fortune in a country where most live on under US$2 a day.

“We’re fighting to be left in peace,” he said.

According to market specialist Darton Commoditie­s, the Democratic Republic of Congo last year produced 72 per cent of the world’s cobalt, a key ingredient in rechargeab­le batteries in electric cars and mobile phones. But the sector’s image is tarnished by artisanal mining, where accusation­s of child labour, dangerous working conditions and corruption are rampant.

“It’s the Wild West of mining,” said one industry analyst.

Tensions

Under Congolese law, artisanal diggers are only allowed to work in government-designated zones and as part of approved cooperativ­es. But most diggers say the designated areas are unviable.

Many prefer to operate on industrial concession­s where there are large, identified deposits, even though this can lead to a showdown with powerful multi-billion-dollar corporatio­ns.

“We’re not going to give in,” said Michel Bizimungu Lungundu, deputy of the highly organised cooperativ­e at Shabara known as COMAKAT, arguing that locals had the right to exploit the lucrative ore.

In 2018, the DRC enacted mining reforms aimed in part at strengthen­ing control over the roaring cobalt trade.

The country declared the metal ‘strategic’ and hiked taxes on industrial­ly produced cobalt.

In 2019, as a storm over rights and working conditions mounted, it also establishe­d the state-owned Enterprise Generale du Cobalt (EGC), giving it a monopoly on buying and marketing artisanall­y produced ore from the designated zones.

The idea was multi-pronged: develop the artisanal sector, boost standards and profit from the trade.

“Your Teslas, Samsungs and Apples had started to balk at cobalt,” said EGC’s compliance and environmen­t director, Tosi Mpanu Mpanu, referring to the reputation­al cost of buying ore from the DRC.

“This was starting to create a real problem.”

Today, though, efforts to clear up the illegal mines are at near standstill. Most diggers are refusing to move into the designated artisanal zones and EGC has yet to start buying cobalt.

“It’s a mess,” admitted a senior

With up to 40 trucks leaving the site to deliver ore to other companies in the region every day, it is clear that these activities are organised and are not the work of smallscale artisanal miners.

Dino Steel spokesman

government official in Kolwezi, the capital of Lualaba province, who said Kinshasa had decided the zones seemingly at random.

The DRC mines ministry did not respond to questions.

‘Glaring problem’

For the diggers at Shabara, there is no question over what they see as their right to stay put.

In 2010, COMAKAT signed a deal with the site’s then majority owners, Dino Steel, entitling them to keep exploiting the pit.

This deal could be renounced only if both parties agreed, according to a copy of the agreement shared with AFP.

In 2015 came a shock: news of Shabara’s sale, and with it the expectatio­n that the diggers would leave. Seven years on, their stubborn presence is also frustratin­g to Glencore, which says it cannot fully develop its concession and that the illegal mine poses a safety risk.

“It’s a glaring problem,” said Marie-Chantal Kaninda, Glencore DRC’s head of corporate affairs.

The Anglo-Swiss company is ‘engaging’ with the government to gain access to the site, according to a spokesman, and it supports diggers moving to artisanal mining zones.

“With up to 40 trucks leaving the site to deliver ore to other companies in the region every day, it is clear that these activities are organised and are not the work of small-scale artisanal miners,” the spokesman added.

AFP was unable to reach Groupe Bazano, which owns Dino Steel.

‘Vested interests’

An estimated 200,000 people work as informal cobalt diggers, making shifting them en masse a tough propositio­n.

“Many reforms ... have gotten railroaded because of vested interests in maintainin­g the status quo,” said Sasha Lezhnev at an NGO called The Sentry.

Some politician­s also appear to have close ties to artisanal mines. Lualaba Mining Minister Jacques Kaumba Mukumbi is the former president of COMAKAT, according to press reports. He did not respond to several AFP requests for comment.

Artisanal cobalt comprises 4-5 per cent of Congolese production, according to price-reporting houses, with an output of several thousand tonnes per year.

Those figures would make Congo one of the world’s top cobalt producers from its informal diggers alone.

Glencore’s Mutanda mine, which lies five kilometres (three miles) away from Shabara on the same land concession, is the world’s largest cobalt mine.

But it has been closed since 2019 partly because of higher taxes and a market slump, the company says. Cobalt spot prices have fallen from about US$70,000 per tonne at the start of the year to US$50,000.

Despite such fluctuatio­ns, analysts say the metal’s future is strong given demand from the energy transition – and which in turn will sustain the mining frenzy. All this means that mining firms and diggers share an interest in cleansing Congolese cobalt of its tainted image, said David Sturmes at the Fair Cobalt Alliance, a multistake­holder initiative.

“Conditions do not yet meet internatio­nal expectatio­ns. But they won’t improve until we invest – and we can only invest if we solve the legalisati­on,” he said.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? A general view of artisanal miners working at the Shabara artisanal mine near Kolwezi.
— AFP photos A general view of artisanal miners working at the Shabara artisanal mine near Kolwezi.
 ?? ?? Some 20,000 people work at Shabara, in shifts of 5,000 at a time. But the country’s poorly regulated artisanal mines, which produce a small but notneglige­able percentage of its total output, have tarnished the image of Congolese cobalt.
Some 20,000 people work at Shabara, in shifts of 5,000 at a time. But the country’s poorly regulated artisanal mines, which produce a small but notneglige­able percentage of its total output, have tarnished the image of Congolese cobalt.
 ?? ?? An artisanal miner holds a cobalt stone at the Shabara artisanal mine near Kolwezi.
An artisanal miner holds a cobalt stone at the Shabara artisanal mine near Kolwezi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia