Weeding out the weak spots in mining regulations

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Through the decades it is fair to say mining has earned itself a chequered reputation. The industry, driven by the world’s insatiable appetite for minerals, has routinely been linked or found responsible for corruption, human rights abuses and environmental degradation, mostly in the Global South.

In recent years, there has been a drive to mine more responsibly, from better social engagement with local and indigenous communities to decarbonisation, combatting corruption, increasing transparency and reducing environmental harm.

Despite this, as the energy transition ramps up and the west races to catch up with China in securing critical minerals, experts are sounding the alarm. They are concerned that loopholes in legislation governing mining still exist. They claim that many new responsible mining initiatives amount to ‘miners marking their own homework’ and that despite a myriad of global efforts and commitments, not much has meaningfully changed on the ground.

Combatting corruption in mining

When asked if the mining industry is operating more responsibly, Alex Kopp, a senior campaigner at NGO Global Witness, says that there has been some progress, “but largely there is a lot of talk and greenwashing without real change".

Take corruption: a large proportion of minerals needed for the energy transition are in countries with high levels of corruption, such as in central and sub-Saharan Africa. Previously the OECD has said the extractive sector accounts for one in five cases of transnational bribery.

Initiatives such as the Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative, which promotes the open and accountable management of oil, gas and mineral resources, have been important for creating more transparency on the issue of money exchanging hands for resources and mining contracts – but it hasn’t solved the problem, says Kopp, in part because it is voluntary.

While there are anti-bribery regulations in some western nations that apply to their domestic companies operating abroad, more needs to be done to enforce them, he says.

A recent case involving Glencore, one of the world's largest globally diversified natural resources companies, has shown progress in this respect.

Last year, Glencore was fined $700m by a US judge for a decade-long scheme to bribe foreign officials across several countries, paying more than $100m in bribes.

Further to this, in the UK, six former employees of Glencore were charged in September by the Serious Fraud Office with conspiring to make corrupt payments to benefit their company’s oil operations in West Africa.