Philippine Daily Inquirer

MINERALS MANAGEMENT, NOT MINING? YES, IT’S POSSIBLE

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Many of the problems that hound the mining sector, including the recent ruckus over the lifting of the ban on open-pit mining, can be solved by a proposed new law: the Alternativ­e Minerals Management Bill (AMMB).

The measure, crafted in consultati­on with environmen­t NGOs, indigenous peoples, and mining-affected communitie­s, provides the answer to the controvers­ies and issues surroundin­g mining today. The House of Representa­tives’ committee on natural resources has wrapped up the Technical Working Group discussion­s on the bill, and it will be up for second reading in the plenary.

The AMMB, or the proposed Philippine Minerals Resources Act, will repeal the Mining Act of 1995 so that the people affected by mining projects can share the power to participat­e in the approval of mining permits through the creation of a multisecto­ral mineral management council.

The bill changes views on mineral resources, from simply profiting from their extraction to actually benefiting from them. The extraction should fuel the country’s industrial­ization through the developmen­t of manufactur­ing and downstream mineral industries. Correcting one of the flawed provisions of the Mining Act, the bill will not any more allow the extraction of ore minerals for export.

Under the AMMB, only Filipino-owned corporatio­ns will be allowed to extract minerals—a complete opposite of the current mining law that allows large-scale mining, mostly operated by multinatio­nal corporatio­ns. The criteria for areas where mining is prohibited are clear. The no-go areas include those declared no-mining zones by the local government; densely populated, especially residentia­l areas; head waters of watershed areas; those with potential acid mine drainage; critical watershed; critical habitat; disaster-prone areas; geo-hazard areas; key biodiversi­ty areas; prime agricultur­al lands; old growth natural or primary and secondary forests; watershed forest reserves; and wilderness areas, among others.

The bill intends to protect small island ecosystems, such as Manicani Island in the Leyte Gulf, from mining. Residents of Manicani have camped outside the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources offices to oppose the new applicatio­n of Hinatuan Mining Corp.’s mineral production sharing agreement on Manicani, which expired last Oct. 27.

The communitie­s bear the brunt of the destructio­n and harm caused by these mining projects. Aside from institutin­g clear-cut conditions on the mining that will be allowed, the AMMB allows allocation to local communitie­s from the mining taxes collection.

Based on the figures of the 2016 Extractive­s Industry Transparen­cy Initiative report for fiscal year 2014, only 17 percent of total revenue payments goes to the local government. This amounts to P1.8 billion of the P11.1-billion total revenue collection from mining.

A provision in the proposed bill is the increase of the excise tax on minerals from the current marginal rate of 2 percent. It is not surprising that revenues from mining and mineral products account for a mere 2.4 percent of the country’s total excise tax collection.

The Philippine­s is the fifth most mineralize­d country in the world, yet mining contribute­s only 1.1 percent of the gross domestic product, 0.4 percent of total employment, and 0.6 percent of the government’s total revenue collection. The landscape of the mining industry is definitely inequitabl­e and unjust. The harm and destructio­n caused by mining on the environmen­t, the people, and the economy are not worth the supposed benefits.

I hope that my colleagues in the legislatur­e will hear the cry of neglect and destructio­n. It is time to replace the current system while we still have time. REP. TEDDY BAGUILAT, Lone District of Ifugao

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