Gov’t sets P50M for mines review
The government will set aside P50 million to finance the review of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources’ (DENR) order to shut down or suspend 28 mines.
In a statement on Sunday, Finance Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said the Department of Budget and Management had committed to fund the interagency Mining Industry Coordinating Council’s (MICC) comprehensive review of all mining contracts, starting with the ones subject to the DENR orders issued last month, of which 23 were to be closed down on top of five to be suspended.
Dominguez cochairs the MICC with Environment Secretary Gina Paz Lopez.
Dominguez said Budget Secretary Benjamin E. Diokno told him that the budget for the review to be undertaken by the MICC technical working group would come from the government’s contingency fund.
The MICC earlier identified the lack of budget as a concern ahead of the three-month review that starts this month.
Article continues after this advertisementBut the MICC will seek a permanent annual budget for such reviews under the General Appropriations Act, Dominguez said.
Article continues after this advertisement“This MICC has never been funded so I think for the 2018 budget, we will propose that we will do that,” Dominguez said. “It’s been done [with other similar councils] so we can do it.”
“It was only proper that the MICC be given a permanent allocation under the national budget given its task under Executive Order No. 79 of reviewing all 311 mining contracts in the country once every two years,” he added.
Dominguez said the MICC will begin today selecting the members of the five interdisciplinary technical review teams.
The review teams will be tasked to conduct an “objective, fact-finding, science-based” review of mining operations nationwide, starting with those covered by the DENR orders.
Dominguez said the technical review teams would be composed of “qualified, certified or licensed persons in their fields of expertise and experienced in mining operations who shall be independent and have no known conflict of interest.”
Each of the five technical review teams will have a geologist, mining engineer or metallurgical engineer; a lawyer, a community relations officer, an environmental management officer, as well as representatives of the local government unit hosting the mining operation, the Department of Finance, the Department of Labor and Employment, the Department of Social Welfare and Development, the Department of Trade and Industry and the National Economic and Development Authority, among other concerned government agencies.
The review will primarily focus on the economic, environmental, legal, social and technical aspects of the mining activities.
This review will be “in accordance with existing guidelines and parameters set forth in the specific mining contracts concerned and other pertinent laws, rules and regulations,” Dominguez said.
Under guidelines approved by the MICC, “the review shall refer/take off from the existing reports (such as audit reports and checklists) prepared/developed by the DENR audit team and technical review committee.”
“The DENR will provide and make available the copies of the documents in the DENR data room for easy reference/access during the conduct of the review. Ocular inspections may also be conducted, if deemed necessary, by the technical review teams and if funds permit,” the guidelines said.
The teams will review the compliance of the 28 mine sites with applicable agreements, submissions, laws and regulations and impact of their operations.
The five teams will also tap the academe to help conduct the review, Dominguez said.
“The MICC will present the findings and submit its recommendations to the Office of the President, which shall make a final decision on the DENR’s closure and suspension orders,” the guidelines said.