GOLD MINING IN THE PHILIPPINES; PAST PRESENT & FUTURE
All about Gold Mining in the Philippines. Understanding Philippine Mining's what's, who's, where's, when's, why's and how's. Tracing its roots, its present status and it's direction in the future....
GOLD MINING IN THE PHILIPPINES
Monday, December 12, 2011
Republic Act No. 7942 AN ACT INSTITUTING A NEW SYSTEM OF MINERAL RESOURCES EXPLORATION, DEVELOPMENT, UTILIZATION AND CONSERVATION
GOLD MINING IN THE PHILIPPINES
Republic Act No. 7942
AN ACT INSTITUTING A NEW SYSTEM OF MINERAL
RESOURCES EXPLORATION, DEVELOPMENT, UTILIZATION
AND CONSERVATION
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY PROVISIONS
Section 1. Title. - This act shall be known as the Philippine
Mining Act of 1995.
Section 2. Declaration of Policy. - All mineral resources in
public and private lands within the territory and exclusive economic
zone of the Republic of the Philippines are owned by the State. It
shall be the responsibility of the State to promote their rational
exploration, development, utilization and conservation through the
combined efforts of government and the private sector in order to
enhance national growth in a way that effectively safeguards the
environment and protect the rights of affected communities.
Section 3. Definition of Terms. - As used in and for
purposes of this Act, the following terms, whether in singular or
plural, shall mean:
(a) "Ancestral lands" refers to all lands exclusively and
actually possessed, occupied, or utilized by indigenous
cultural communities by themselves or through their
ancestors in accordance with their customs and
traditions since time immemorial, and as may be
defined and delineated by law.
(b) "Block" or "meridional block" means an area bounded
by one-half (1/2) minute of latitude and one-half (1/2)
minute of longitude, containing approximately eightyone
hectares (81 has).
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(c) "Bureau" means the Mines and Geosciences Bureau
under the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources.
(d) "Carrying capacity" refers to the capacity of natural
and human environments to accommodate and absorb
change without experiencing conditions of instability
and attendant degradation.
(e) "Contiguous zone" refers to water, sea bottom and
substratum measured twenty-four nautical miles (24
n.m.) seaward from the base line of the Philippine
archipelago.
(f) "Contract area" means land or body of water
delineated for purposes of exploration, development, or
utilization of the minerals found therein.
(g) "Contractor" means a qualified person acting alone or
in consortium who is a party to a mineral agreement or
to a financial or technical assistance agreement.
(h) "Co-production agreement (CA)" means an agreement
entered into between the Government and one or
more contractors in accordance with Section 26(b)
hereof.
(I) "Department" means the Department of Environment
and Natural Resources.
(j) "Development" means the work undertaken to explore
and prepare an ore body or a mineral deposit for
mining, including the construction of necessary
infrastructure and related facilities.
(k) "Director" means the Director of the Mines and
Geosciences Bureau.
(l) "Ecological profile or eco-profile" refers to geographicbased
instruments for planners and decision-makers
which presents an evaluation of the environmental
quality and carrying capacity of an area.
(m) "Environmental compliance certificate (ECC)" refers to
the document issued by the government agency
concerned certifying that the project under
consideration will not bring about an unacceptable
environmental impact and that the proponent has
complied with the requirements of the environmental
impact statement system.
(n) "Environmental impact statement (EIS)" is the
document which aims to identify, predict, interpret, and
communicate information regarding changes in
environmental quality associated with a proposed
project and which examines the range of alternatives
for the objectives of the proposal and their impact on
the environment.
(o) "Exclusive economic zone" means the water, sea
bottom and subsurface measured from the baseline of
the Philippine archipelago up to two hundred nautical
miles (200 n.m.) offshore.
(p) "Existing mining/quarrying right" means a valid and
subsisting mining claim or permit or quarry permit or
any mining lease contract or agreement covering a
mineralized area granted/issued under pertinent mining
laws.
(q) "Exploration" means the searching or prospecting for
mineral resources by geological, geochemical or
geophysical surveys, remote sensing, test pitting,
trenching, drilling, shaft sinking, tunneling or any other
means for the purpose of determining the existence,
extent, quantity and quality thereof and the feasibility of
mining them for profit.
( r ) "Financial or technical assistance agreement" means
a contract involving financial or technical assistance for
large-scale exploration, development, and utilization of
mineral resources.
(s) "Force majeure" means acts or circumstances beyond
the reasonable control of contractor including, but not
limited to, war, rebellion, insurrection, riots, civil
disturbance, blockade, sabotage, embargo, strike,
lockout, any dispute with surface owners and other
labor disputes, epidemic, earthquake, storm, flood or
other adverse weather conditions, explosion, fire,
adverse action by government or by any
instrumentality or subdivision thereof, act of God or any
public enemy and any cause that herein describe over
which the affected party has no reasonable control.
(t) "Foreign-owned corporation" means any corporation,
partnerships, association, or cooperative duly
registered in accordance with law in which less than
fifty per centum (50%) of the capital is owned by
Filipino citizens.
(u) "Government" means the government of the Republic
of the Philippines.
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(v) "Gross output" means the actual market value of
minerals or mineral products from its mining area as
defined in the National Internal Revenue Code.
(w) "Indigenous cultural community" means a group or
tribe or indigenous Filipinos who have continuously
lived as communities on communally-bounded and
defined land since time immemorial and have
succeeded in preserving, maintaining, and sharing
common bonds of languages, customs, traditions, and
other distinctive cultural traits, and as may be defined
and delineated by law.
(x) "Joint venture agreement (JV)" means an agreement
entered into between the Government and one or more
contractors in accordance with Section 26(c) hereof.
(y) "Mineral processing" means the milling, beneficiation
or upgrading of ores or minerals and rocks or by similar
means to convert the same into marketable products.
(z) "Mine wastes and tailings" shall mean soil and rock
materials from surface or underground mining and
milling operations with no economic value to the
generator of the same.
(aa) "Minerals" refers to all naturally occurring inorganic
substance in solid, gas, liquid, or any intermediate
state excluding energy materials such as coal,
petroleum, natural gas, radioactive materials, and
geothermal energy.
(ab) "Mineral agreement" means a contract between the
government and a contractor, involving mineral
production-sharing agreement, co-production
agreement, or joint-venture agreement.
(ac) "Mineral land" means any area where mineral
resources are found.
(ad) "Mineral Resource" means any concentration of
minerals/rocks with potential economic value.
(ae) "Mining area" means a portion of the contract area
identified by the contractor for purposes of
development, mining, utilization, and sites for support
facilities or in the immediate vicinity of the mining
operations.
(af) "Mining operation" means mining activities involving
exploration, feasibility, development, utilization, and
processing.
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(ag) "Nongovernmental organization (NGO)" includes
nonstock, nonprofit organizations involved in activities
dealing with resource and environmental conservation,
management and protection.
(ah) "Net assets" refers to the property, plant and
equipment as reflected in the audited financial
statement of the contractor net of depreciation, as
computed for tax purposes, excluding appraisal
increase and construction in progress.
(ai) "Offshore" means the water, sea bottom, and
subsurface from the shore or coastline reckoned from
the mean low tide level up to the two hundred nautical
miles (200 n.m.) exclusive economic zone including the
archipelagic sea and contiguous zone.
(aj) "Onshore" means the landward side from the mean
tide elevation, including submerged lands in lakes,
rivers and creeks.
(ak) "Ore" means a naturally occurring substance or
material from which a mineral or element can be mined
and/or processed for profit.
(al) "Permittee" means the holder of an exploration permit.
(am) "Pollution control and infrastructure devices" refers to
infrastructure, machinery, equipment and/or
improvements used for impounding, treating or
neutralizing, precipitating, filtering, conveying and
cleansing mine industrial waste and tailings as well as
eliminating or reducing hazardous effects of solid
particles, chemicals, liquids or other harmful
byproducts and gases emitted from any facility utilized
in mining operations for their disposal.
(an) "President" means the President of the Republic of the
Philippines.
(ao) "Private land" refers to any land belonging to any
private person which includes alienable and disposable
land being claimed by a holder, claimant, or occupant
who has already acquired a vested right thereto under
the law, although the corresponding certificate or
evidence of title or patent has not been actually issued.
(ap) "Public land" refers to lands of the public domain
which have been classified as agricultural lands and
subject to management and disposition or concession
under existing laws.
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(aq) "Qualified person" means any citizen of the Philippines
with capacity to contract, or a corporation, partnership,
association, or cooperative organized or authorized for
the purpose of engaging in mining, with technical and
financial capability to undertake mineral resources
development and duly registered in accordance with
law at least sixty per centum (60%) of the capital of
which is owned by citizens of the Philippines:
Provided, That a legally organized foreign-owned
corporation shall be deemed a qualified person for
purposes of granting an exploration permit, financial or
technical assistance agreement or mineral processing
permit.
(ar) "Quarrying" means the process of extracting, removing
and disposing quarry resources found on or
underneath the surface of private or public land.
(as) "Quarry permit" means a document granted to a
qualified person for the extraction and utilization of
quarry resources on public or private lands.
(at) "Quarry resources" refers to any common rock or
other mineral substances as the Director of Mines and
Geosciences Bureau may declare to be quarry
resources such as, but not limited to, andesite, basalt,
conglomerate, coral sand, diatomaceous earth, diorite,
decorative stones, gabbro, granite, limestone, marble,
marl, red burning clays for potteries and bricks,
rhyolite, rock phosphate, sandstone, serpentine, shale,
tuff, volcanic cinders, and volcanic glass: Provided,
that such quarry resources do not contain metals or
metallic constituents and/or other valuable minerals in
economically workable quantities: Provided, further,
That non-metallic minerals such as kaolin, feldspar,
bull quartz, quartz or silica, sand and pebbles,
bentonite, talc, asbestos, barite, gypsum, bauxite,
magnesite, dolomite, mica, precious and semi-precious
stones, and other non-metallic minerals that may later
be discovered and which the Director declares the
same to be of economically workable quantities, shall
not be classified under the category of quarry
resources.
(au) "Regional director" means the regional director of any
mines regional office under the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources.
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(av) "Regional office" means any of the mines regional
offices of the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources.
(aw) "Secretary" means the Secretary of the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources.
(ax) "Special allowance" refers to payment to the claimowners
or surface right-owners particularly during the
transition period from Presidential Decree No. 463 and
Executive Order No. 279, series of 1987.
(ay) "State" means the Republic of the Philippines.
(az) "Utilization" means the extraction or disposition of
minerals.
REPUBLIC ACT NO. 7076 AN ACT CREATING A PEOPLE’S SMALL-SCALE MINING PROGRAM AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES
GOLD MINING IN THE PHILIPPINES
REPUBLIC ACT NO. 7076
AN ACT CREATING A PEOPLE’S SMALL-SCALE MINING
PROGRAM AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES
Section 1. Title. This Act shall be known as the “People’s
Small-Scale Mining Act of 1991.”
Section 2. Declaration of Policy. It is hereby declared the
policy of the State to promote, develop, protect and rationalize viable
small-scale mining activities in order to generate more employment
opportunities and provide an equitable sharing of the nation’s wealth
and natural resources, giving due regard to existing rights as herein
provided.
Section 3. Definitions. For purposes of this Act, the following
terms shall be defined as follows:
(a) “Mineralized areas” refer to areas with naturally
occurring mineral deposits of gold, silver, chromite, kaolin,
silica, marble, gravel, clay and like mineral resources;
(b) “Small-scale mining” refers to mining activities which
rely heavily on manual labor using simple implements and
methods and do not use explosives or heavy mining
equipment;
(c) “Small-scale miners” refer to Filipino citizens who,
individually or in the company of other Filipino citizens,
voluntarily form a cooperative duly licensed by the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources to
engage, under the terms and conditions of a contract, in
the extraction or removal of minerals or ore-bearing
materials from the ground;
(d) “Small-scale mining contract" refers to co-production,
joint venture or mineral production sharing agreement
between the State and a small-scale mining contractor for
the small-scale utilization of a plot of mineral land;
(e) “Small-scale mining contractor” refers to an individual
or a cooperative of small-scale miners, registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission or other
appropriate government agency, which has entered into
an agreement with the State for the small-scale utilization
of a plot of mineral land within a people’s small-scale
mining area;
(f) “Active mining area” refers to areas under actual
exploration, development, exploitation or commercial
production as determined by the Secretary after the
necessary field investigation or verification including
contiguous and geologically related areas belonging to
the same claimowner and/or under contract with an
operator, but in no case to exceed the maximum area
allowed by law;
(g) “Existing mining right” refers to perfected and
subsisting claim, lease, license or permit covering a
mineralized area prior to its declaration as a people’s
small-scale mining area;
(h) “Claimowner” refers to a holder of an existing mining
right;
(i) “Processor” refers to a person issued a license to
engage in the treatment of minerals or ore-bearing
materials such as by gravity concentration, leaching
beneficiation, cyanidation, cutting, sizing, polishing and
other similar activities;
(j) “License” refers to the privilege granted to a person to
legitimately pursue his occupation as a small-scale miner
or processor under this Act;
(k) “Mining Plan” refers to a two-year program and activities
and methodologies employed in the extraction and
production of minerals or ore-bearing materials, including
the financial plan and other resources in support thereof;
(l) “Director” refers to the regional executive director of the
Department of Environment and Natural Resources;
(m) “Secretary” refers to the Secretary of the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources.
Section 4. People’s Small-scale Mining Program. For the
purpose of carrying out the declared policy provided in Section 2
hereof, there is hereby established a People’s Small-scale Mining
Program to be implemented by the Secretary of the Department of
Environment and Natural Resources, hereinafter called the
Department, in coordination with other concerned government
agencies, designed to achieve an orderly, systematic and rational
scheme for the small-scale development and utilization of mineral
resources in certain mineral areas in order to address the social,
economic, technical, and environmental problems connected with
small-scale mining activities.
The People’s Small-scale Mining Program shall include the
following features:
(a) The identification, segregation and reservation of certain
mineral lands as people’s small-scale mining areas;
(b) The recognition of prior existing rights and productivity;
(c) The encouragement of the formation of cooperatives;
(d) The extension of technical and financial assistance, and
other social services;
(e) The extension of assistance in processing and marketing;
(f) The generation of ancillary livelihood activities;
(g) The regulation of the small-scale mining industry with the
view to encourage growth and productivity; and
(h) The efficient collection of government revenue.
Section 5. Declaration of People’s Small-scale Mining
Areas.
The Board is hereby authorized to declare and set aside
people’s small-scale mining areas in sites onshore suitable for smallscale
mining, subject to review by the Secretary, immediately giving
priority to areas already occupied and actively mined by small-scale
miners before August 1, 1987: Provided, That such areas are not
considered as active mining areas: Provided, further, That the
minerals found therein are technically and commercially suitable for
small-scale mining activities: Provided, finally, That the areas are not
covered by existing forest rights or reservations and have not been
declared as tourist or marine reserves, parks and wildlife
reservations, unless their status as such is withdrawn by competent
authority.
Section 6. Future People’s Small-scale Mining Areas. The
following lands, when suitable for small-scale mining, may be
declared by the Board as people’s small-scale mining areas:
(a) Public lands not subject to any existing right;
(b) Public lands covered by existing mining rights which are
not active mining areas; and
(c) Private lands, subject to certain rights and conditions,
except those with substantial improvements or in bonafide
and regular use as a yard, stockyard, garden, plant
nursery, plantation, cemetery or burial site, or land
situated within one hundred meters (100 m.) from such
cemetery or burial site, water reservoir or a separate
parcel of land with an area of ten thousand square meters
(10,000 sq.m.) or less.
Section 7. Ancestral Lands. No ancestral land may be
declared as a people’s small-scale mining area without the prior
consent of the cultural communities concerned: Provided, That, if
ancestral lands are declared as people’s small-scale mining areas,
the members of the cultural communities therein shall be given
priority in the awarding of small-scale mining contracts.
Section 8. Registration of Small-scale Miners. All persons
undertaking small-scale mining activities shall register as miners with
the Board and may organize themselves into cooperatives in order to
qualify for the awarding of a people’s small-scale mining contract.
Section 9. Award of People’s Small-scale Mining
Contracts. A people’s small-scale mining contract may be awarded
by the Board to small-scale miners who have voluntarily organized
and have duly registered with the appropriate government agency as
an individual miner or cooperative: Provided, That only one (1)
people’s small-scale mining contract may be awarded at any one time
to a small-scale mining contractor who shall start mining operations
within one (1) year from the date of award: Provided, further, That
priority shall be given to small-scale miners residing in the province or
city where the small-scale mining area is located.
Applications for a contract shall be subject to a reasonable fee
to be paid to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources
regional office having jurisdiction over the area.
Section 10. Extent of Contract Area. The Board shall
determine the reasonable size and shape of the contract area
following the meridional block system established under Presidential
Decree No. 463, as amended, otherwise known as the Mineral
Resources Development Decree of 1974, but in no case shall the
area exceed twenty hectares (20 has.) per contractor and the depth
or length of the tunnel or adit not exceeding that recommended by the
Director taking into account the following circumstances:
(a) Size or membership and capitalization of the cooperative;
(b) Size of mineralized area;
(c) Quantity of mineral deposits;
(d) Safety of miners;
(e) Environmental impact and other considerations; and
(f) Other related circumstances.
Section 11. Easement Rights. Upon the declaration of a
people’s small-scale mining area, the Director, in consultation with
the operator, claimowner, landowner or lessor of an affected area,
shall determine the right of the small-scale miners to existing facilities
such as mining and logging roads, private roads, port and
communication facilities, processing plants which are necessary for
the effective implementation of the People’s Small-scale Mining
Program, subject to payment of reasonable fees to the operator,
claimowner, landowner or lessor.
Section 12. Rights Under a People’s Small-scale Mining
Contract. A people’s small-scale mining contract entitles the smallscale
mining contractor to the right to mine, extract and dispose of
mineral ores for commercial purposes. In no case shall a small-scale
mining contract be subcontracted, assigned or otherwise transferred.
Section 13. Terms and Conditions of the Contract. A
contract shall have a term of two (2) years, renewable subject to
verification by the Board for like periods as long as the contractor
complies the provisions set forth in this Act, and confers upon the
contractor the right to mine within the contract area: Provided, That
the holder of a small-scale mining contract shall have the following
duties and obligations:
(a) Undertake mining activities only in accordance with a
mining plan duly approved by the Board;
(b) Abide by the Mines and Geosciences Bureau and the
Small-scale Mining Safety Rules and regulations;
(c) Comply with his obligations to the holder of an existing
mining right;
(d) Pay all taxes, royalties or government production share
as are now or may hereafter be provided by law:
(e) Comply with pertinent rules and regulations on
environmental protection and conservation, particularly
those on tree-cutting, mineral processing and pollution
control;
(f) File under oath at the end of each month a detailed
production and financial report to the Board; and
(g) Assume responsibility for the safety of persons working in
the mines.
Section 14. Rights of Claimowners. In case a site declared
and set as a People’s Small-scale Mining Area is covered by an
existing mining right, the claimowner and the small-scale miners
therein are encouraged to enter into a voluntary and acceptable
contractual agreement with respect to the small-scale utilization of the
mineral values from the area under claim. In case of disagreement,
the claimowners shall be entitled to the following rights and privileges:
(a) Exemption from the performance of annual work
obligations and payment of occupation fees, rental, and
real property taxes;
(b) Subject to the approval of the Board, free access to the
contract area to conduct metallurgical with the operations
of the small-scale miners; and
(c) Royalty equivalent to one and one half (1 1/2%) of the
gross value of the metallic mineral output or one percent
(1%) of the gross value of the nonmetallic mineral output
to be paid to the claimowner: Provided, That such rights
and privileges shall be available only if he is not
delinquent in the performance of his annual work
obligations and other requirements for the last two (2)
years prior to the effectivity of this Act.
Section 15. Rights of Private Landowners. The private
landowner or lawful possessor shall be notified of any plan or petition
to declare his land as a people’s small-scale mining area. Said
landowner may oppose such plan or petition in an appropriate
proceeding and hearing conducted before the Board.
If a private land is declared as a people’s small-scale mining
area, the owner and the small-scale mining contractors are
encouraged to enter into a voluntary and acceptable contractual
agreement for the small-scale utilization of the mineral values from
the private land: Provided, That the owner shall in all cases be
entitled to the payment of actual damages which he may suffer as a
result of such declaration: Provided, further, That royalties paid to the
owner shall in no case exceed one percent (1%) of the gross value of
the minerals recovered as royalty.
Section 16. Ownership of Mill Tailings. The Small-scale
mining contractor shall be the owner of all mill tailings produced from
the contract area. He may sell the tailings or have them processed in
any custom mill in the area: Provided, That, if the small-scale mining
contractor decides to sell its mill tailings, the claimowner shall have a
preemptive right to purchase said mill tailings at the prevailing market
price.
Section 17. Sale of Gold. All gold produced by small-scale
miners in any mineral area shall be sold to the Central Bank, or its
duly authorized representative, which shall buy it at prices
competitive with those prevailing in the world market regardless of
volume or weight.
The Central Bank shall establish as many buying stations in
gold-rush areas to fully service the requirements of the small-scale
miners thereat.
Section 18. Custom Mills. The establishment and operation
of safe and efficient custom mills to process minerals or ore-bearing
materials shall be limited to mineral processing zones duly
designated by the local government unit concerned upon
recommendation of the Board.
In mining areas where the private sector is unable to establish
custom mills, the Government shall construct such custom mills upon
the recommendation of the Board based on the viability of the project.
The Board shall issue licenses for the operation of custom mills
and other processing plants subject to pollution control and safety
standards.
The Department shall establish assay laboratories to crosscheck
the integrity of custom mills and to render metallurgical and
laboratory services to miners.
Custom mills shall be constituted as withholding agents for the
royalties, production share or other taxes due the Government.
Section 19. Government Share and Allotment. The revenue
to be derived by the Government from the operation of the mining
program herein established shall be subject to the sharing provided in
the Local Government Code.
Section 20. People’s Small-scale Mining Protection Fund.
There is hereby created a People’s Small-scale Mining Protection
Fund which shall be fifteen percent (15%) of the national
government’s share of the internal revenue tax or production share
due the Government which shall be used primarily for information
dissemination and training of small-scale miners on safety, health,
and environmental protection, and the establishment of mine rescue
and recovery teams including the procurement of rescue equipment
necessary in cases of emergencies such as landslides, tunnel
collapse, or the like.
The fund shall also be made available to address the needs of
the small-scale miners brought about by accidents and/or fortuitous
events.
Section 21. Rescission of Contracts and Administrative
Fines. The noncompliance with the terms and conditions of the
contract or violation of the rules and regulations issued by the
Secretary pursuant to this Act, as well as the abandonment of the
mining site by the contractor, shall constitute a ground for the
cancellation of the contracts and the ejectment from the people’s
small-scale mining area of the contractor. In addition, the Secretary
may impose fines against the violator in an amount of not less than
Twenty thousand pesos (P20,000.00) and not more than One
hundred thousand pesos (P100,000.00) . Nonpayment of the fine
imposed shall render the small-scale mining contractor ineligible for
other small-scale mining contracts.
Section 22. Reversion of People’s Small-scale Mining
Areas. The Secretary, upon recommendation of the Director, shall
withdraw the status of the people’s small-scale mining area when it
can no longer be feasibly operated on a small-scale mining basis or
when the safety, health and environmental conditions warrant that the
same shall revert to the State for proper disposition.
Section 23. Actual Occupation by Small-scale Miners.
Small-scale miners who have been in actual operation of mineral
lands on or before August 1, 1987 as determined by the Board shall
not be dispossessed, ejected or removed from said areas: Provided,
That they comply with the provisions of this Act.
Section 24. Provincial/City Mining Regulatory Board.
There is hereby created under the direct supervision and control of
the Secretary a provincial/city mining regulatory board, herein called
the Board, which shall be the implementing agency of the
Department, and shall exercise the following powers and functions,
subject to review by the Secretary:
(a) Declare and segregate existing gold-rich areas for smallscale
mining;
(b) Reserve future gold and other mining areas for smallscale
mining;
(c) Award contracts to small-scale miners;
(d) Formulate and implement rules and regulations related to
small-scale mining;
(e) Settle disputes, conflicts or litigations over conflicting
claims within a people’s small-scale mining area, an area
that is declared a small mining area; and
(f) Perform such other functions as may be necessary to
achieve the goals and objectives of this Act.
Section 25. Composition of the Provincial/City Mining
Regulatory Board. The Board shall be composed of the Department
of Environment and Natural Resources’ representative as Chairman;
and the representative of the governor or city mayor, as the case may
be, one (1) small-scale mining representative from a nongovernment
organization who shall come from an environmental group, as
members.
The representatives from the private sector shall be nominated
by their respective organizations and appointed by the Department
regional director. The Department shall provide the staff support to
the Board.
Section 26. Administrative Supervision over the People’s
Small-scale Mining Program. The Secretary through his
representative shall exercise direct supervision and control over the
program and activities of the small-scale miners within the people’s
small-scale mining area.
The Secretary shall within ninety (90) days from the effectivity
of this Act promulgate rules and regulations to effectively implement
the provisions of the same. Priority shall be given to such rules and
regulations that will ensure the least disruption in the operations of
the small-scale miners.
Section 27. Penal Sanctions. Violations of the provisions of
this Act or of the rules and regulations issued pursuant hereto shall
be penalized with imprisonment of not less than six (6) months nor
more than six (6) years and shall include the confiscation and seizure
of equipment, tools and instruments.
Section 28. Repealing Clause. All laws, decrees, letters of
instruction, executive orders, rules and regulations, and other
issuances, or parts thereof, in conflict or inconsistent with this Act are
hereby repealed or modified accordingly.
Section 29. Separability Clause. Any section or provision of
this Act which may be declared unconstitutional shall not affect the
other sections or provisions hereof.
Section 30. Effectivity. This Act shall take effect fifteen (15)
days after the publication in the Official Gazette or in a national
newspaper of general circulation.
QUICKFACTS ABOUT PHILIPPINE MINING
GOLD MINING IN THE PHILIPPINES
The title of my first blog was not posted on the title heading but it appeared and was in the first sentence in the first paragraph. Nonetheless, i am still getting acquainted with the operations as i'm newbie in blogging. Anyways, a journey of thousand miles starts with a single step, so i am really inclined to have my second step now and so on..until i can exhaustively deliver to you all what is there in MINING in general and Mining in the Philippines specifically.
As a backgrounder i will offer you some basics and quickfacts about Philippine Mining;
What is mining?
Mining is the extraction of valuable minerals and other materials from the ground.
What are the different stages of mining?
Mining is composed of four (4) stages, these are:
1. Exploration
2. Development and Construction
3. Utilization/Commercial Operation
4. Decommissioning/final mining stage/Rehabilitation stage
What is exploration?
Exploration is the process of searching for valuable minerals and quantifying them. It enables the mining company to determine whether there is a feasible deposit for mining development and production.
How is mining regulated?
Republic Act No. 7942, otherwise known as the Philippine Mining Act of 1995 and its Revised Implementing Rules and Regulations, DENR Administrative Order 96-40, as amended, is the main legal framework regulating the mining industry.
On the other hand, Republic Act No. 7076 and its Implementing Rules and Regulations, DENR Administrative Order 34, series of 1992, governs small scale mining.
Are all areas open to mining activities?
No, there are areas that are closed to mining. Per Section 19 of the Mining Act, R.A. 7942, Mineral Agreement or Financial or Technical Assistance Agreement applications shall not be allowed:
(a) In military and other government reservations, except upon prior written clearance by the government agency concerned;
(b) Near or under public or private buildings, cemeteries, archeological and historic sites, bridges, highways, waterways, railroads, reservoirs, dams or other infrastructure projects, public or private works including plantations or valuable crops, except upon written consent of the government agency or private entity concerned;
(d) In areas expressly prohibited by law; and
(f) Old growth or virgin forests, proclaimed watershed forest reserves, wilderness area, mangrove forests, mossy forests, national parks, provincial/municipal forests, parks, greenbelts, game refuge and bird sanctuaries as defined by law and in areas expressly prohibited under the National Integrated Protected Area System (NIPAS) under Republic Act No. 7586, Department Administrative Order No. 25, series of 1992 and other laws.
Can mining and environmental protection co-exist?
Yes, responsible mining and environmental protection can co-exist. Modern and responsible mining does not destroy the environment; it just alters it to another land use. The future use of the land after mining is designed and planned even before mining starts. The government also requires that mining contractors institute an Environmental Protection and Enhancement Program before the mining operation starts in order to protect the environment.
How can the Mining Act safeguard the environment?
The Mining Act and its Revised Implementing Rules and Regulations, DENR AO 96-40, as amended, requires that an Environmental Protection and Enhancement Program covering the period of the mineral agreement or permit be prepared and approved prior to commencement of mining or exploration. The environmental program shall be incorporated in the work program which the contractor or permittee shall submit as an accompanying document to the application for a mining permit or exploration permit. The work program shall include not only plans relative to mining operations but also to rehabilitation, regeneration, revegetation and reforestation of mineralized areas, slope stabilization of mined-out and tailings covered areas, aquaculture, watershed development and water conservation; and socioeconomic development.
Who monitors the compliance of these environmental programs?
To ensure compliance of approved environmental programs, Multipartite Monitoring Teams (MMT) are created to monitor their implementation. The expenses for such monitoring activities are charged to the Monitoring Trust Fund that the Contractor is required to setup. The MMT is composed of representatives from the environmental NGO; the affected communities; the affected Indigenous Cultural Community (ies), if any; the Contractor; from the DENR-Regional Office concerned and the representative of the Mines and Geosciences Bureau-Regional Office as Head.
How are the interests of the host communities safeguarded?
The Mining Act requires that the Contractor shall assist in the development of its mining community, the promotion of general welfare of its inhabitants and the development of science and mining technology. In line with these, a five-year Social Development and Management Program (SDMP) is prepared in partnership with the host and neighboring communities. The SDMP should be able to provide alternative livelihood opportunities for employees, their dependents, and the neighboring communities during the life-of-the-mine.
The mining company is mandated to spend at least 1% of the annual direct mining and milling costs for social program.
Section 62 of the Mining Act also prescribes that the contractor shall give preference to Filipino citizens in all types of mining employment within the country insofar as such citizens are qualified to perform the corresponding work with reasonable efficiency and without hazard to the safety of the operations. Priority is also given to the local residents in hiring workers for the mining project.
What are the guarantees to protect the indigenous peoples?
Under Section 16 of the Mining Act, “No ancestral land shall be opened for mining operations without the prior and informed consent of the indigenous cultural community concerned.”
In the event of an agreement with an indigenous cultural community, royalty payments are also agreed upon by the parties. The said royalty shall form part of a trust fund for the socioeconomic well being of the indigenous cultural community.
Does the Mines and Geosciences Bureau (MGB) have the technical capability to audit the environmental management and social development compliances of the mining companies?
Yes, the MGB has the technical capability to monitor the environmental management and social development compliances of mining companies. Most of the technical staff has ample training in environmental and social sciences from Australia, Japan, Netherlands, France or Sweden. Also, the MGB is equipped with a modern laboratory and field equipment for on-site analysis.
What makes the present law better than the old Mining Law?
The Mining Act of 1995 and its Revised Implementing Rules and Regulations, DAO 96-40, as amended ensures that environmental conditions are sustained over the life of the mine. The minimum environmental requirements are the implementation of the following:
1. Environmental Work Program (EnWP) – addresses any potential disturbance during the exploration stage;
2. Environmental Compliance Certificate (ECC) – should be secured prior to the development and construction of the mine;
3. Environmental Protection and Enhancement Program (EPEP) – the document that details the methods and procedures the company will use in attaining its environmental protection and management objectives over the life-of-the-mine.
4. Annual Environmental Protection and Enhancement Program (AEPEP) – based on the approved EPEP to implement progressive rehabilitation measures.
5. Final Mine Rehabilitation/Decommissioning Plan (FMR/DP) – submitted together with the EPEP before the start of mining operation, ensures that all disturbed areas will be restored, as near, as possible to its original state or to a pre-agreed productive end-use.
In addition, the mining/exploration permit applicant is required to secure a Certificate of Satisfactory Environmental Management and Community Relations Record.
How would modern mining help the labor industry?
Mining has accounted for about 149,000 employees in its large-scale (mining and quarrying) sector or about 0.40% of total Philippine employment. However, this is significantly higher if the industry’s multiplier effect is considered. While estimates vary, it is safe to assume that for every job generated in the mining industry, around four to six more jobs are indirectly generated in the upstream and downstream sectors.
What is the economic contribution of mining?
Since the revitalization of the minerals industry in 2004, at least US$1.4 billion has already been invested in the country. It is expected that this investment will reach US$11.3 billion by 2011 while generating an annual foreign exchange of at least US$10.1 Billion from exports of mineral products.
GOLD MINING IN GENERAL
I come to love mining by chance, a chance encounter some eleven years ago with one of the Gurus of mining, one chance encounter that shifted most of my life's interests, perspectives and directions.
It made me seek more knowledge about the intricacies of mining gold leaving me to believe that i found real wisdom not until, i stumbled upon a chapter and a few verses in the Holy book, in Job 28:1-28 which tells of a comparison between man's knowledge & skill in seeking and in getting Earth's Treasures to a real wisdom that is often neglected, God's greatest gift, his Wisdom.
1"Surely there is a [a]mine for silver
And a place where they refine gold.
2"Iron is taken from the dust,
And copper is smelted from rock.
3"Man puts an end to darkness,
And (A)to the farthest limit he searches out
The rock in gloom and deep shadow.
4"He sinks a shaft far from habitation,
Forgotten by the foot;
They hang and swing to and fro far from men.
5"The earth, from it comes food,
And underneath it is turned up as fire.
6"Its rocks are the source of sapphires,
And its dust contains gold.
7"The path no bird of prey knows,
Nor has the falcon's eye caught sight of it.
8"The proud beasts have not trodden it,
Nor has the fierce lion passed over it.
9"He puts his hand on the flint;
He overturns the mountains at the base.
10"He hews out channels through the rocks,
And his eye sees anything precious.
11"He dams up the streams from flowing,
And what is hidden he brings out to the light.
The Search for Wisdom Is Harder
12"But (B)where can wisdom be found?
And where is the place of understanding?
13"(C)Man does not know its value,
Nor is it found in the land of the living.
14"The deep says, 'It is not in me';
And the sea says, 'It is not with me.'
15"(D)Pure gold cannot be given in exchange for it,
Nor can silver be weighed as its price.
16"It cannot be valued in the gold of Ophir,
In precious onyx, or sapphire.
17"(E)Gold or glass cannot equal it,
Nor can it be exchanged for articles of fine gold.
18"Coral and crystal are not to be mentioned;
And the acquisition of (F)wisdom is above that of pearls.
19"The topaz of Ethiopia cannot equal it,
Nor can it be valued in (G)pure gold.
20"(H)Where then does wisdom come from?
And where is the place of understanding?
21"Thus it is hidden from the eyes of all living
And concealed from the birds of the sky.
22"[b](I)Abaddon and Death say,
'With our ears we have heard a report of it.'
23"(J)God understands its way,
And He knows its place.
24"For He (K)looks to the ends of the earth
And sees everything under the heavens.
25"When He imparted (L)weight to the wind
And (M)meted out the waters by measure,
26When He set a (N)limit for the rain
And a course for the (O)thunderbolt,
27Then He saw it and declared it;
He established it and also searched it out.
28"And to man He said, 'Behold, the (P)fear of the Lord, that is wisdom;
And to depart from evil is understanding.'"
My analysis:
Man has, by knowledge & skill, brought the precious metals from their concealment. He can similarly discover hidden things, as the veins of silver, and gold, yet this was a wisdom of an higher nature, and out of man's reach. The caverns of the earth he may discover, but not the counsels of heaven.
Dispensations of Providence were regulated by the highest wisdom. To confirm this, Job showed of what a great deal of knowledge and wealth men may make themselves masters.
The caverns of the earth may be discovered, but not the counsels of Heaven.
Go to the miners, thou sluggard in religion, consider their ways, and be wise. Let their courage and diligence in seeking the wealth that perishes, shame us out of slothfulness and faint-heartedness in labouring for the true riches..
How much better is it to get wisdom than gold! How much easier, and safer! Yet gold is sought for, but grace neglected. Will the hopes of precious things out of the earth, so men call them, though really they are paltry and perishing, be such a spur to industry, and shall not the certain prospect of truly precious things in heaven be much more so?
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