Responsible mining is capable of creating general economic welfare for its host communities in Africa which could long survive the mines themselves, Randgold Resources chief executive Mark Bristow said on Monday.
Speaking at a media briefing, Bristow said the utilisation of natural resources was often the best and sometimes the only way of alleviating the pressing problem of poverty in much of Africa.
For the full benefit to be spread throughout the affected communities, however, mining companies had to take an enlightened long-term view of their activities, give priority to the development of sustainable operations, and build mutually rewarding partnerships with the governments and people of their host countries.
“If you’re driven only by dollars, you shouldn’t be mining in Africa,” Bristow said.
“Here, you must accept that you have to invest in the future and that you also have a responsibility to make a tangible contribution to such things as infrastructural development and social upliftment programmes,” he said.
Bristow said Mali presented an outstanding example of what this approach could achieve.
He noted that over the past 10 years, Randgold Resources alone had invested and reinvested more than $1-billion there. During that time, the mines it developed at Morila and Loulo — in areas where there had been little economic activity other than subsistence farming — had paid $500-million directly to the government in taxes, royalties and dividends.
It was the largest single taxpayer in the country as well as its largest private-sector employer, having provided more than 3Â 000 Malians with skills and careers.
These in turn are estimated to have generated economic benefit for a further 60Â 000 local people.
“Randgold Resources is also committed to the integration of environmental and social impact management into its business activities, and operates to international standards in this regard. On the social responsibility front, Morila last year spent more than $160Â 000 on direct community development while Loulo spent more than $240Â 000 on projects ranging from building and equipping schools to malaria control programmes,” he said.
Bristow noted that in Mali, as in the other African countries in which Randgold Resources operates, the mining industry is in fact closely regulated by the relevant authorities.
“In Africa, it is not enough for a company to be profitable — it also has to be a responsible corporate citizen and a good neighbour, with a demonstrable long-term commitment to its host country,” he said. – I-Net Bridge