TUBA, Benguet—Philex Mining Corp. has formed an ad hoc committee to prepare for the planned multi-stakeholder review to be conducted by the Mining Industry Coordinating Council, and in line with the Duterte administration’s promotion of responsible mining.
This is apart from the previous audit done by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources.
“We have to be ready for this upcoming audit by the MICC,” said Eulalio Austin Jr., CEO and president of Philex Mining.
The firm’s committee is composed of company executives and senior managers at its Padcal mine here, Austin added.
“It’s not that we are unprepared; it’s just that we are taking this seriously, as we support the ruling administration in its move to rid the industry of irresponsible-mining practices,” he said.
Austin said the team is tasked to assess what and where else could the company improve in its operations, then draw up formal suggestions and recommendations, and cascade these to the employees, especially those who are hands-on in the mining and milling operations.
Philex Mining passed with flying colors the technical mine audit conducted by the DENR on all operating large-scale miners last August.
According to a statement released last Wednesday by the Department of Finance, this was not the multi-stakeholder review as required under Executive Order 79, which created the MICC in 2012 and tasked it to implement reforms in the country’s mining industry.
Quoting Finance Undersecretary Bayani Agabin, the DoF statement said the department came to learn about this during the recent meetings conducted by MICC and its TWG, or technical working group.
On Feb. 20, they approved the framework, process, and methodology for carrying out the multi-stakeholder review in response to President Duterte’s order to reassess DENR’s mine audit.
It also said Agabin was puzzled about claims by the DENR that the MICC had “no legal basis to undertake a review of mining operations—even though she herself had agreed to the multi-stakeholder review and signed the MICC resolution to that effect.”
The DOF and the DENR convened Feb. 9 the MICC, which is mandated by law to review all mining-related rules and regulations, issuances and agreements, upon the directive issued by Duterte during the Feb. 7 Cabinet meeting.
“While Section 3 of EO 79 provides that a ‘multi-stakeholder team led by the DENR shall conduct a review of the performance of mining operations’ in the country every two years, no such review has been done since EO 79 took effect in 2012,” the DOF said, quoting Agabin.
Co-chaired by Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III and Environment Secretary-designate Regina Lopez, who was bypassed by the powerful Commission on Appointments in a confirmation hearing done before it went on recess for the Holy Week, the MICC carried out a comprehensive discussion on the results of the DENR audit and Lopez’s decision to close 23 mines and suspend five others.
“The MICC determined that there was a need to conduct a comprehensive review of the mining operations given the technical nature of the DENR audit and the number of mines involved in the closure and suspension orders,” Agabin said.
Lopez also ordered in February to cancel the MPSA, or Mineral Production Sharing Agreement, of 75 mines, including the Silangan project, in Surigao del Norte, because these sit on watersheds, where mining is prohibited.
The project is owned by the Silangan Mindanao Mining Co., Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Philex Mining.
Austin has said the Silangan MPSA, where government shares in the production of a contractor (miner) in kind or in monetary value, does not cover areas in proclaimed watershed forest reserves, adding this could stand any challenge in court.
He added that contrary to what Lopez had claimed, none of the four tenements under the Philex Gold Philippines, Inc. (PGPI), another Philex Mining subsidiary, is in watersheds.
In a statement last August, Philex Mining said it was grateful for DENR’s technical mine audit, saying it was an excellent chance for the company to have illustrated before the government regulators its being a responsible miner throughout its 60 years of operation.
“We will not waiver in carrying out best practices in our pursuit of responsible mining, which we have humanized through the implementation of social and environmental projects in the host and neighboring communities, and by helping in economic progress by religiously paying the required regular and mining-related taxes,” Austin said.
“And neither shall we pass up another chance of showcasing to the public how we do responsible mining at the upcoming MICC multi-stakeholder review.”