Harper visit to Peru targets better use of mining royalties to alleviate poverty – by Heather Scoffield (Canadian Press/CTV News – May 22, 2013)

http://www.ctvnews.ca/

LIMA, Peru — Canadian mining companies hope that Stephen Harper’s visit to Peru will lead to better use of the billions in royalties and taxes that are sitting idle in a country where poverty is still a large problem.

Harper met mining executives Wednesday before a lengthy tete-a-tete with Peruvian President Ollanta Humala Tasso.
The executives stressed the need for regional governments to invest the royalties and taxes in local initiatives that will help alleviate poverty that affects more than half the rural population of Peru.

Humala, too, said he wants to see better social inclusion as a result of the mining activity that dominates his country’s economy.

Regional governments are sitting on up to $4 billion in unspent royalties, money lying idle in government bank accounts.
The pressure to “publish what you pay” in Peru is part of a push from mining companies and G8 governments that is gaining momentum around the world, said Glenn Nolan, president of the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada. Nolan was in Lima to meet Harper.

“We want to see good laws and transparency so that our (royalties) go back into the community,” Nolan said in an interview.

Many of the communities near mining sites are in remote locations, are often indigenous, and are far poorer than the rest of the country. About 75 Canadian mining companies are active in Peru, mainly in exploration for gold, silver and copper.
Harper announced a $53-million aid package that includes money to help local and regional governments better target their royalties to mining communities. The money had already been set aside in previous budgets but had not been allocated to specific projects.

“Peru, like Canada, has abundant natural resources. And like Canada, the responsible development of those resources is vitally important to job creation and economic growth in Peru,” Harper said after his meetings.
The two leaders announced an agreement to expand air transport between Canada and Peru that will mean more flights to more places in each country.

They sang the praises of natural resources, free trade and education. And the Peruvian president condemned the illicit trafficking of Peruvian cultural property.

The natural resource focus on Canada’s aid policy has raised eyebrows in the development agency community.

There is a global push to have mining and energy companies be more transparent in the royalties and payments they make to governments in developing and emerging countries, and Canada’s new policy plays into this dynamic.

At the same time, aid activists worry that Canadian profits will trump poverty alleviation when it comes to Canada’s foreign policy and aid.

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