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Business & Finance

Some mining areas look like most deprived places on earth – Akufo-Addo

By : Kofi Kafui Sampson on 05 Feb 2019, 01:44

Nana Akufo-Addo President

The President of Ghana, Nana Addo-Dankwa Akufo-Addo, has on Tuesday 5th February, 2019 stated that while the mining industry on the continent plays an important role in the economies of many African countries, “the pursuit of gold and other minerals have reduced many of our forests to degraded lands [and] some of our rivers to polluted bodies”

The President was speaking at the 25th Mining Indaba in Cape Town South Africa. The four-day conference and exhibition, which is under the theme: ‘Championing Africa’s sustainable economic growth’ has brought together major players in the mining industry around the globe.

President Akufo-Addo, who was in attendance as a Keynote Speaker, expressed regret at the devastation that mining has wrought on many parts of the continent as a result of greed and personal aggrandizement.

“For centuries our minerals have been the attraction for adventure and fortune seekers”

“Many foreign throws and crowns are adorned with the gems taken from our land. Not only through straightforward means… and diamonds from our lands are sometimes labelled blood diamonds,” he lamented

“Many of the areas [these minerals] are mined look like the most deprived places on earth”

Nana Akufo-Addo being ushered around the Ghana Pavilion at the Mining Indaba

 

“But people of Africa do not have to be poor for others to be rich”, adding, there is a need for a more sustainable approach to mineral exploitation to benefit both investors, host nations and communities.

“After centuries of exploitation, Africa is currently still home to 30% of the world’s mineral reserves and an even higher proportion of deposits of gold, diamonds etc… With our continent having been blessed with so many minerals, it is not surprising that mining has always played an important role in our lives,” he stated.

He averred that mining remains an important undertaking as everyday life is depended on minerals extracted, hence the need to ensure that it benefits the larger society rather than a select few.

“Most of the things we use, for example, the smartphones we own; the coins we spend to the electricity we consume emanate from metals and minerals that have been mined… Mining is a necessity and not just an indulgence to satisfy aesthetics or curiosity,” he said.

He commended organisers of the Mining Indaba for creating the platform for minerals ideation and urged participants to ensure that discussions are progressive and relevant to the needs of Africa and its people.

Participants call for effective governance

Some participants who spoke to Cedidollar.com were delighted about the president’s bold pronouncements and demanded governments should negotiate improved mining contracts that are beneficial to the state.

Lumitogo Mbago, a participant resident in South Africa further urged leaders of the continent to prepare their respective nations towards enabling investors to thrive in the mining space. “We need more of our countries to create an integrated industry to build the value chain and grow local economies.”

Civil Society Disagrees

Michael Ntim, a Ghanaian civil society researcher agreed with the President’s passion for improved conditions in mining communities but put the blame at the doorstep of the government. He noted that in spite of the passage of the Minerals Development Fund Act,2016 (Act 912), which is supposed to, among others, ensure that mining communities receive a reasonable share of the royalties from mining, “the government has failed to constitute the Board of the MDF without which moneys cannot be disbursed for any developmental work. It is also incumbent on the government to regulate the sector effectively to ensure that the state receives its due from mining for national development. If you do not undertake these activities and put the blame on the investor, you are being unfair.”

Mr. Ntim called for greater transparency in the use of revenue from the industry as it will go a long way to check the mismanagement of scarce revenue for nation building.

Ghana remains the second largest producer of gold on the continent and the 10th globally. Aside gold, the country is noted for its Manganese, Bauxite, Diamond, Iron Ore and Lithium reserves. In the past decade, Ghana has also become a producer of oil joining the league of African oil producing nations.

Source: CediDollar.com