This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 30, September 4-10, 2005
First 100% Foreign-owned Mining Firm to Start Commercial Production
Since the
Supreme Court ruling in December 2004 calling the 1995 Mining Act as
constitutional, the government has turned its high gears to entice foreign mining
companies to invest in the Philippines. Of about
nine million hectares of
potential mining land only 1.4 million hectares are covered by mining permits.
An Australian company will start commercial production soon, and more are
expected to follow.
BY CAESAR BEN BASAN BAROŃA
Amid
the political crisis, the Macapagal-Arroyo administration has allowed the
commercial production of the first 100-percent foreign-owned major mining
operation in the country since 1946.
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) Secretary Michael
Defensor announced last week the approval of the feasibility study of
Australia-based Climax Arimco Mining's Dinkidi gold and copper project. He said
the project is one of the government's 23 flagship projects that are expected to
generate $6 billion in investments.
The
mining project, located in Didipio (200 kms north of Manila), covers a total
mining area of 21,465 hectares in the provinces of Nueva Vizcaya and Quirino.
The area is inhabited mostly by Ifugao and Ibaloi indigenous people who were
displaced from other mining operations, as well as by the Kalanguya, Tagalog,
Ilocano and Visayan settlers.
Mining exploration in the Didipio valley began in 1994. Commercial production is
expected to begin in the first quarter of 2007.
Defensor said that Climax Arimco is pouring in an initial investment of $79
million for the operation, along with $2.8 million and $8.6 million allotted for
social and environmental expenditures, respectively. The mining project is
expected to generate $783 million in a 15-year period, according to Chito Gozar,
general manager of Australasian Philippines Mining, Inc. (APMC), Climax Arimco's
Philippine arm. The government, for its part, expects to collect $131 million in
taxes from the project.
Climax estimates an annual production of 150,000 ounces of gold equivalent,
containing 94,000 ounces of gold and 10,000 tons of copper in concentrate. These
are mined from a total ore resource of 120 million tons and a mineable reserve
of 23.8 million tons, consisting of 1.6 grams per ton of gold and 0.61 percent
copper. Additionally, the Didipio mine has a diluted resource of 3.2 million
tons, consisting of 2.5 grams per ton of gold and 0.61% per ton of copper. As of
this writing, gold is trading at A$570 (or US$436.13) to A$578 (US$442.25) per
ounce and copper at US$1.74 to US$1.78 per pound.
Shareholders of Arimco include ANZ Nominees, Ltd. (33 percent); Citicorp
Nominees, Ltd. (15.8 percent) and the Den Dutys Corporation (7.4 percent).
Climax is also tapping Australia and New Zealand (ANZ) Investment Bank for
financing. Climax Arimco's Philippine chair is Jose Leviste, brother-in-law of
former Senator Loren Legarda.
Mining operations involve four years of open pit mining and 11 years of
underground sub-level caving operations, according to Climax. Around two million
tons of ore could be processed every year from the open pit and underground
mining excavations.
Supreme Court for foreign ownership
The
DENR’s clearance for Climax’s commercial production came after the December 2004
Supreme Court ruling upholding the constitutionality of Republic Act 7942
(Mining Act of 1995) which allows 100-percent foreign equity ownership in mining
ventures.
Government officials anticipate foreign investments amounting to $6 billion from
23 mining ventures in five years to revive the mining sector and to cater to
China's demand for minerals.
The
Mining Act provides incentives like income tax holiday. The law also grants
exemption from taxes and duties on imported spare parts, wharfage dues, export
tax, duty and impost fees. Mining companies may also avail of tax credit on raw
materials and supplies, additional deductions from taxable income for labor
expense and necessary and major infrastructure works. Non-fiscal incentives, on
the other hand, come in the form of employment of foreign nationals and
simplified customs importation procedures and importation of consigned equipment
for 10 years.
In
addition to these incentives, the Mining Act also grants incentives for
“pollution control devices; income tax carry forward of losses; income tax
accelerated depreciation on fixed assets; and investment guarantees such as
investment repatriation, earnings remittance, freedom from expropriation and
requisition of investment and confidentiality of information." Renewed interest in
mining investments has ensued following an East-West Center study in 1994 of 11
to 25 new mineral deposits that might be developed from 1995 to 2015. The
Philippines has mineral reserves of 6.67 billion metric tons of metallic and
78.472 metric tons of non-metallic minerals. It also has the fifth largest gold
and copper reserves in the world, with about nine million hectares of potential
mining land. So far, only 1.4 million hectares are covered by mining permits.
Gold and copper reserve estimates are 967,180,197 metric tons and 5,301,507,657
metric tons, respectively.
A
Treasure MAP
In
1994, then President Fidel V. Ramos granted a financial and technical assistance
agreement (FTAA) to Climax Arimco. According to the DENR, an FTAA allows a
company to recover its investment, after that a scheme of 60 percent going to
the government and 40 percent to the contractor, shall apply.
The
government granted an environmental compliance certificate (ECC) in August 1999
but this was rescinded in October 2001 by then DENR Secretary Heherson Alvarez.
At that time, opponents said that the company illegally obtained a memorandum of
agreement with the officials of Barangay (Village) Didipio. They also said that
the project affected a proclaimed watershed. Residents, moreover, felt
large-scale mining would devastate a "booming upland agriculture," including
rice and citrus plantations.
Various sectors have raised concerns about the social and environmental impacts
of mining projects, as well as questions of constitutionality and sovereignty.
After the Marcopper disaster in 1996, the DENR, non-government organizations and
mining companies reviewed the implementing guidelines of the Mining Act which
required companies to comply with environmental standards.
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo issued Executive Order No. 270 in January 2004
which seeks to open up and revitalize the mining industry. The DENR then
prepared the Mineral Action Plan (MAP) which contains 57 strategies and 126
specific activities that were approved by the President through Memorandum
Circular No. 67 in September 2004.
The
appointment of Defensor paved the way for the Supreme Court ruling so that now,
no less than a government’s primer admits that "foreign companies could exploit
the country's mineral resources." The revitalization of the mining industry is
considered a solution to curb the budget deficit.
Procedures were simplified and streamlined to attract investors in mining. The
government established regional one-stop shops for processing of mining
applications to replace procedures requiring various government agencies to
study each mining application. One process that was reduced was the Free Prior
and Informed Consent (FPIC) of affected indigenous communities, reducing the
procedure from 185 days to 107 days.
According to the Cordillera People's Alliance (CPA), however, this would reduce
the FPIC into a "mere technical and procedural requirement" and would threaten
the right of indigenous peoples to self-determination, including the control,
management and utilization of their resources. Furthermore, legal shortcuts were
introduced to circumvent local government units, the CPA said, adding that under
the MAP, the Department of Justice can intervene in disputes with local
authorities and the communities they represent. The CPA called for clearer
guidelines on the contract and agreements, potential adverse impacts,
independent and social studies and access to information.
Defensor, in an Aug. 2 speech at the Asian Development Bank, said the MAP would
be the master plan for the development and revitalization of the mining
industry. Although Defensor said that third-party environmental audits will be
required, the CPA countered that there is still a lack of strict regulation and
that the MAP has no strong penalties and sanctions for serious environmental and
ecological disasters. The CPA cited the collapse of 10 mine tailings dams yet no
single responsible company was stiffly punished. The CPA said that in this case,
actions speak louder than words.
Defensor also reiterated a recent Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
Ministers' Meeting on Minerals statement urging the region to exploit its
competitive advantage in mineral resources through joint explorations and joint
mining operations, intra-regional trade and sharing of information and technical
know-how. The ministers also urged the region to seek investment to "optimize
the development of its reserves and (to) meet (the) increasingly complex demands
of a global market."
On
the other hand, the CPA stressed that the MAP “(sacrifices) environmental
regulations and social acceptability for the unhampered entry of foreign mining
companies" The CPA claimed that the serious social and environmental
consequences are treated with "more rhetoric rather than decisive actions." It
added that these concerns and national patrimony are sacrificed to satisfy the
demands of the mining companies.
"The country will
become a battleground against the plunder of the people's resources," CPA’s Joan
Carling warned in the past. Given the historical record, the new decision may
mine revitalized resistance. Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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BulatlatBattleground against plunder