A treatise on our local mining industry by a foreign entity www.resourceinvestor.com (registration required). Need I say more?
The Time Is Now -
By Stephen Clayson
21 Jun 2005 at 08:00 AM EDT
In an impassioned oration to manqué
In the face of significant opposition, the Speaker has been instrumental in creating the legal framework within which foreign miners are now able to effectively control 100% of a project within the
The process of reopening the
It is under an FTAA that foreign firms can control 100% of a mining project requiring upwards of $50m of investment, though strictly speaking ownership of resources remains that of the Filipino government. Benjamin Phillip Romualdez, President of both the Philippine and ASEAN Chambers of Mines and also President of Benguet Corporation, the largest Philippine mining company, sees this as a mere technicality, and asserts that in practice, mining projects can be as securely held by foreigners as in any comparable nation. Crucially in addition, repatriation of capital and freedom from expropriation are explicitly guaranteed to investors under the 1995 Mining Act.
The only overt restriction on mining ventures of over $50m in investment value is that they strictly adhere to policies of sustainable development, id est those facilitating economic growth, social equity and environmental protection. The substance of these policies is enshrined in the Minerals Action Plan of 2004, which reportedly contains 57 strategies and 126 activities intended to serve to moderate the negative impact of large scale mining.
The government of the
Romualdez ascribes the positive change in attitudes towards mining on a political and popular level to the belief encouraged by the current government that foreign investment in mining can contribute significantly to the overall economic prosperity of the
Indeed, for each new mining job created, it is estimated that between four and ten jobs will be created in other industries via multiplier effects. It is now widely accepted in the
It is also notable that despite the recent hiatus, the
In the long term, the key issue for the mining industry will be the durability of the popular and political commitment to it. This seems well entrenched at present, but a political upheaval towards the radical left or an unfortunate series of disastrous incidents at mining operations could turn sentiments towards mining sour. However, there is no indication of the former at present, and western mining firms should by now have developed the procedures necessary to almost eliminate serious mishaps.
It does though seem vital to the industry’s future that as in many other locations, the operational imperatives prescribed by the Philippine government to mitigate the negative effects of large scale mining are followed to the letter. If this is truly recognised by the foreign firms that choose to move into the
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