UN agency plan tackles ‘hidden cost’ of gold
18 February 2019
UN agency plan
tackles ‘hidden cost’ of gold, paves way for safer,
mercury-free mining
Camarines
Norte, the Philippines: An artisanal miner ascends from a
shaft in the hills outside of
Paracale.
From
smartphones to wedding rings, the hidden cost of everyday gold is its
threat to human and environmental health, according to a new
United Nations-driven initiative launched on Monday that
aims to tackle mercury-based mining
methods.
As gold
production exposes millions of men, women and children
globally to toxic levels of mercury every year, a new
$180-million Global Environment Facility-backed
Global Opportunities for the Long-term Development of the
artisanal and small-scale gold mining (ASGM) sector (GEF
GOLD) programme will improve conditions for miners across
eight countries while slashing harmful mercury
emissions.
“The widespread use of mercury in the artisanal and small-scale sector affects the environment and people, particularly in developing countries” said Philippe Scholtès, the UN Industrial Development Organization’s (UNIDO) Managing Director of Programme Development and Technical Cooperation.
The ASGM, which accounts for 20 per cent of the world’s annual gold production, is the single largest source of man-made mercury emissions, responsible for releasing of as much as 1,000 tonnes of mercury to the atmosphere annually.
“Mercury emissions impact health and ecosystems, contaminating the food we eat, the water we drink and the air we breathe,” explained Joyce Msuya, Acting Executive Director of UN Environment (UNEP). “This is a long-term problem we need to confront now” to protect health, provide livelihoods and save the planet, she added.
Moreover, some 15 million people work in the ASGM sector, including 4.5 million women and over 600,000 children.
“By phasing out mercury use and connecting miners to markets for responsibly produced and sourced minerals, GEF GOLD will help to ensure the gold value chain both supports miners and provides consumers with access to ethically produced, environmentally sustainable gold,” said Jacob Duer, Head of UNEP’s Chemicals and Health branch.
Working
on the edge
To sate the
appetite for gold for jewelry, investment and consumer
products, miners and processors often work in harsh
conditions without industry protections on pay, health or
safety, with many relying on toxic, mercury-based extraction
methods.
“It is important to transform the extremely harmful practice using mercury in ASGM to protect the human health and ecosystem,” stressed Abdoulaye Mar Dieye, UN Nations Development Programme, (UNDP) Director of the Policy and Programme Support Bureau.
Studies indicate that ASGM mercury exposure is a major, largely neglected global health problem that put miners and their communities at risk of brain damage; vision and hearing loss; and delayed childhood development.
While ASGM offers employment for rural populations, miners frequently operate on the edges of legality, with ASGM either banned outright or limited by legislation. GEF GOLD intends to secure miners’ livelihoods by supporting regulatory and policy reforms to formalize ASGM across the programme countries – opening market and finance access to increase incomes and enable mercury-free technology.
Additionally, the GEF GOLD programme will work with the private sector to promote compliance with international standards on responsible mineral supply chains.
Spanning eight countries, the five-year programme is a partnership between UNEP, UNDP, UNIDO, the Global Environment Facility, Conservation International and the governments of Burkina Faso, Colombia, Guyana, Indonesia, Kenya, Mongolia, the Philippines and Peru.
ends