Title: Can Extractive Industries Contribute to Sustainable Development
1Can Extractive Industries Contribute to
Sustainable Development Improved Governance
An Emerging Public Private Partnership in the
Congos Katanga Province
2Presentation Outline
- Country Context
- Goal of the EIA GDA
- Summary of Objectives
- Activities and Success Stories
- Sustainable Development
- Governance
- Regional Development Fund
- What is Next
- Questions for the Nigeria Global Compact
3Artisan mining can be highly lucrative. It can be
difficult to identify economically attractive
alternatives
4Country ContextChallenges Loom Large
- Huge country vast resources
- Governance
- Peace process
- Election, rule of law, decentralization
- Social issues
- Limited social development, infrastructure,
livelihoods - Corruption and transparency
- Conflict, human rights and security
- Business and investment framework
- Mafia controls most of DRC mining sector
5(No Transcript)
6CSR from HBR
- Motivators for companies (Porter Kramer 12/06)
- moral obligation,
- sustainability,
- license to operate
- Reputation
- Co-creation of new products, services,
relationships between private sector NGOs
(Brugmann and C.K. Prahalad, 2/07)
7Goal of EIA GDA
- To promote sustainable and equitable economic
recovery and improved governance in Katanga and
the Democratic Republic of the Congo
8Objectives of the EIA
- Implement sustainable and participatory community
development projects - Support improved governance, tax and royalty
transparency and socially responsible investment
in the mining sector - Establish a regional development fund
9Objective 1 Sustainable Development Activities
- Community Mobilization
- 32 communities reached in Dikulushi Region
- 29 workshops organised with participatory tools
in villages / localities - Three-year Social Development Plans created in 30
communities (draft form) - 24 Village Development Committees 1 City
Development Committee operational - 22 Committees trained on project management and
conflict resolution
10Sustainable Development Activities Cont.
- Success Story Community Organized Fishing Ban
- Lake Moero (Kilwa)
- Community has prioritized voluntary
re-introduction of rainy season fishing ban to
re-populate fish
11Sustainable Development Activities Cont.
- Infrastructure
- Village committee manages projects with maximum
local employment--15 minimum local contribution - School classrooms, markets and toilets in
construction - 1 bridge complete
- 1 large water project in progress in Pweto
- 1 visitation hall for patient relatives at Kilwa
hospital - Assistance to Kilwa hospital to improve
management for long term management - 2 nutritional centers
- 1 water extension project in Kilwa
12Sustainable Development Activities Cont.
- Agricultural Extension
- 31 farmers contact groups established
- 924 farmers reached
- 3 Gardeners association assisted in three
villages (52 members) - 2 3-round training sessions organized for farmers
- 19 tons of seeds distributed on credit basis as
end of November (peanuts, bean, soybean,
sunflower, and vegetable seeds) - 3 seed multiplication sites established with
volunteer farmers (Base seeds inputs cash
credit provided and training organised for seeds
farmers) - 7 villages identified for husbandry improvement
13Sustainable Development Activities Cont.
- Small and Micro-enterprise (SMEs)
- SME activities in progress
- 7 types of business plan are in study
- 2 transport projects
- 2 hardware projects
- 1 wood work
- 1 chicken breeding (broilers and layers)
- 1 peanut and sunflower oil extraction project
- 1 rice hull machine project
- 2 maize mills projects
14- Success Story Kawama Gravel Co-op
15Sustainable Development Activities Cont.
- Womens Empowerment
- WORTH is a womans program that fosters
grassroots development, increased family income,
and local control of resources. - Pact organized 10 womens groups with a total of
315 members. - Local teachers (women) recruited and trained
- Saving started (100 300 Fc/member/week).
- First month saving amount 162,000 Fc
- Potential microfinance for equipment (400,000
loan portfolio guaranteed by USAID and Trust
Merchant Bank funds)
16Objective 2 Governance Activities
- Transparency
- Getting royalties back to territoires and
provinces, with policy at national, provincial,
territorial levels capacity building pilot
implementation - Two companies ready to publish what they have
paid - Companies trying to figure out how to assist
institutional capacity building of local and
territorial government to absorb tax and
royalties and to identify donors to build
capacity during the interim
17Human rights and security present enormous
challenges in the Congo
18Governance Activities Cont.
- Human Rights and Security
- Voluntary Principles
- Ongoing Security Managers Network and Meetings on
VP--requesting GDRC to pay train Mine Police
offer to finance - VP audits on request and as needed for Pact due
diligence - Technical assistance for risk assessment and
company training in VP, especially - Assuming risk management for communities, not
just the company - Informing all authorities of potential human
rights abuses - How to limit liability where VPs required to
assure that no known abusers of human rights
are used in security
19Informal mining sector provides huge employment
4 of population directly, up to 20 indirectly
20Governance Activities Cont.
- Artisan and Small-scale Mining
- May employ and enable survival of over 2 million
people directly - Ituri gold 100,000 growing
- Kivus tin, coltan 250,000
- Katanga heterogenite 120,000
- Kasai diamonds 1,000,000
- Most activity is technically illegal
- Feeds traffickers and illegal trade routes
- Currently extremely hazardous and socially
disruptive - No protection for the miners
- Feeds economic oligopoly militia of all kinds,
including pay for GDRC police military
21Governance Activities Cont.
- Artisan and Small-scale Mining
- Analysis of options for companies
- IFC Equator Principles
- Voluntary Principles
- Negotiation mediation with all stakeholders
- Creation of alternatives--at least to give hope--
- Livelihoods
- Public worksroad rehab/maintenance
- Supplier SMEs to mines
- Vocational training
22Success Story Mutoshi (Kolwezi) Pit
23Options for positive relations between companies
and artisan miners are being explored. In some
cases, artisan mining can be an efficient way to
exploit a commercially marginal resource
24Objective 3 Regional Development Fund
- Evolving higher level linking
- Companies concern to reduce in-migration
- Donors interest in support for
provinces/territories to manage royalties - GDRC figuring out how to manage its own royalty
funds - In process
25Important to sense of personal / national control
of minerals resentment that concessions granted
to foreign companies
26What is Next
- Who is in, do we keep pillagers out, what about
aspiring members? - Transfer ownership
- Support community structures
- Capacity of local NGO partners
- GDRC involvement/commitment
- Expand and modify to other mining areas of DRC
- Not clear if Mafia and corrupt GDRC can be
influenced enough . . . .
27Questions Relevant to Nigeria Global Compact
- How will you define CSR?
- Who will help companies?
- How can companies civil society work together
on sustainable development, human rights
transparency/anti-corruption? - How can we compare CSR outcomes?
- In fragile/transition states can CSR help if
governance does not improve?
28Merci!