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‘Big brother-small brother’ strategy for big mining firms eyed

May 8, 2023 Cory Martinez 177 views

BIG brother-small brother” integration strategy within the social development and management programs of large mining companies must be implemented to help small-scale miners meet their social development targets.

Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) Secretary Antonia Loyzaga said that they are now studying the said scheme wherein big mining firms are encouraged to set aside a portion of their social development fund for the social development targets of small-scale miners.

“There must be a way to negotiate the resilience of communities where mining is happening, the social development needs to happen,” Loyzaga said in a recent interview. “This way, inclusivity in terms of the progress of the community as a whole can really be institutionalized,” she added.

Loyzaga described the “big brother-small brother” strategy as one that would include capacitating small miners and enhancing the resilience of mining communities.

To make this happen, she said that there is a need to revisit the social development funding of large mining companies.

“In this government, you cannot move forward with your for-profit agenda without a national dividend that redounds to a local community.

And that’s the bottom line,” she said.

Loyzaga stressed that the Marcos administration is open to responsible miners who consider not only the environmental aspects of mining but also promote social development.

DENR Administrative Order No. 2010-21, or the Revised Implementing Rules and Regulations of Republic Act (RA) 7942, otherwise known as the Philippine Mining Act of 1995, requires mining contractors and permit holders to have an SDMP or Social Development and Management Program, which aims for the sustained improvement in the living standards of host and neighboring communities.

The SDMP has a timeline of five years and is funded by the companies themselves by allocating 1.5 percent of their annual expenses.

Out of this allocation, 75 percent goes to community development, while ten percent goes to the development of mining technology and geosciences, and the remaining 15 percent is used for an information, education, and communication campaign.

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