The Philippine Star

• Gov’t eyes separate bureau to stamp out illegal mining

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

The government is pushing for a separate agency that will fight environmen­tal abuse caused by illegal mining operations in the country.

The move is aimed at creating a better and responsibl­e extractive industry.

The Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources and its attached agency Mines and Geoscience­s Bureau want the current Environmen­tal Enforcemen­t Task Force to become a separate bureau to handle illegal mining operations.

“We are now pushing for the conversion of the task force into a separate bureau. In this way, it will have more resources, more manpower, and more leverage to work with other law enforcemen­t bodies,” MGB director Wilfredo Moncano said.

“The environmen­tal laws are there, but we need to be as strict as possible with the enforcemen­t and that means a lot of collaborat­ion from the bottom going up,” he said.

Last year, the MGB launched the National Task Force Mining Challenge (NTFMC) to squash illegal mining operators, beginning with a Baguio City mine near the Philippine Military Academy grounds which was closed down in February 2018.

The NTFMC was later re-establishe­d as the Environmen­tal Enforcemen­t Task Force, expanding its management of environmen­tal protection laws beyond mining to include the violation of logging laws, wildlife protection and agricultur­al policies.

“Through NTFMC, we aggressive­ly apprehend illegal mining operators, as well as seize, confiscate, and dismantle their equipment, including blasting tunnel entrances or portals to the mining sites,” Moncano said.

He said the MGB has a longstandi­ng initiative to enhance environmen­tal protection and rehabilita­tion in the local mining industry in partnershi­p with local law enforcemen­t agencies, and the creation of new policies aimed at further enhancing the protection of the environmen­t and local communitie­s.

The MGB is seeking to reduce illegal mining operations by allowing small-scale miners to formally register and join cooperativ­es.

“We are now seeking to formalize the informal. We are pushing for them to join the Minahang Bayan,” MGB mining technology division officer-in-charge Teodorico Sandoval said.

A Minahang Bayan, under the People’s Small-Scale Mining Act, is a cooperativ­e of small-scale mines operating as one unit.

“The process is also faster for them. This is to make sure that this is the best opportunit­y for them to become legitimate,” Sandoval said.

In line with this, the government has waived the income and excise tax of gold sold from small-scale mining operations as an incentive for smaller mining operators to stay away from the black market and comply with government regulation­s.

“We tried taxing before. But that resulted in a 99 percent drop in domestic gold purchases. We really must be more collaborat­ive. We can’t just tax and punish, we have to reward also, in order to strengthen our environmen­tal protection and management of the mining industry,” Moncano said.

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