Benguet villages benefit from mining operations
>> Monday, July 30, 2012
TUBA, Benguet – Remote villages hosting the operations of
large-scale mining companies nationwide will have a chance to accelerate their
respective infrastructure and socio-economic growth following the ordered
increase in the funds being allocated for social development and management
projects (SDMP) starting next year, a key mine official of the Philex Mining
Corporation said.
Engineer Libby R. Ricafort, Philex vice president for operations
and resident manager, said the firm was in receipt of an order from the Mines
and Geosciences Bureau (MGB) that SDMP funds should be increased to 1.5 percent
of the direct mining and milling cost by next year after the expiration of its
earlier approved 5-year SDMP.
“Our host and neighboring communities will directly benefit from
the increased SDMP funding and the expected increase in the volume of hard and
soft projects that will be identified in order to help develop remote villages
and improve the living condition of the people,” Ricafort, citing that its
robust operations could be attributed to its strong partnership with the
indigenous peoples living within its host and neighboring communities.
In 2008, Philex entered into a royalty agreement, the first of
its kind in the country’s mining industry, with the indigenous Peoples
Organization of AlangPukis, Sta. Fe, Sabian, Oliba and Luacan (IPO-APSSOL)
which allowed the group to have a 1.25 percent of the firm’s gross output as
its royalty share for a period of 25 years.
Lawyer Eduardo Aratas , Philex legal division chief, said over
the past four years since the royalty agreement was signed, the indigenous
peoples group was able to get around P425 million as royalty share from the
mining operations.
However, he added the company was able to implement more than
P200 million worth of SDMP projects to the different host and neighboring
communities of the mining company over the past four years which were part of
the royalty a share of the indigenous peoples pursuant to the provisions of the
royalty agreement.
Under existing rules and regulations on the grant of SDMP
projects, mining companies are required to spend 90 percent of 1 percent of
their direct mining and milling cost for various hard and soft projects that
will accelerate the infrastructure and socio-economic development of their host
communities.
With the new order increasing the allocations for SDMP projects
to 1.5 percent of the company’s direct milling and mining cost, Aratas
explained more projects will be implemented for the development of communities
that will translate to improved living condition of indigenous peoples thereby
resulting to increased economic activities for the local residents in
preparation for their sustained living condition even beyond mine life in the
year 2020.
“We will continue to infuse more impact projects to our host and
neighboring communities by next year and the new lifespan of our SDMP so that
we will be able to instill to the people living in far flung communities the
value of sustaining their existing sources of livelihood even beyond mine
life,” Aratas stressed, citing that Philex wants to sustain its identity as a
world-class mining company that sincerely practices responsible mining geared
towards the sustained growth of its host and neighboring communities in a bid
to spur rural economic growth for the sake of poverty alleviation.
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