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People living in communities near valuable mineral deposits often complain that they don’t receive enough of the economic benefits associated with them. But as the call for greater transparency in the mining sector gains momentum worldwide, they are increasingly holding their own governments responsible, rather than just the mining companies.
They say if miners want to operate in more stable investment environments, they need to encourage host governments to play by the rules and engage with local community members.
The Canadian mining industry seems to agree. Earlier this year, the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) and the Mining Association of Canada (MAC) teamed up with transparency organizations to ask the provincial securities commissions to make it mandatory for companies listed on Canadian stock exchanges to disclose how much they pay governments.
Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver told the PDAC convention on Monday that the federal government wants to work with the provincial and territorial securities commissions to implement mandatory reporting standards on a project-by-project basis. If the securities commissions don’t implement these standards, the federal government will put its own legislation in place by April 1, 2015.