Involving the Mining Sector in Achieving Land Degradation Neutrality

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Quatrini, S., R. Barkemeyer, and L. Stringer. (2016). Involving the Mining Sector in Achieving Land Degradation Neutrality. Solutions 7(5): 55-63. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/involving-the-mining-sector-in-achieving-land-degradation-neutrality/

Feature

Involving the Mining Sector in Achieving Land Degradation Neutrality by Simone Quatrini, Ralf Barkemeyer, and Lindsay C. Stringer

M

ining companies drive  economic growth and progress, but can contribute significantly to environmental degradation if their operations are not carefully managed.6–8 The industry itself cannot operate without disturbing land, so it has direct impact on land quality. While there are several ways of assessing carbon, water, or ecological footprints, there is no comprehensive methodology to assess the whole impact of mining operations on land, including its renewable and abiotic resources. This lack of metrics and knowledge could help to explain the limited engagement by mining companies in sustainable land management (SLM) to date. Tackling this issue could also open up new opportunities for broader engagement of the mining sector in the collective efforts of the international community to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the years ahead. The main international policy framework addressing land degradation is the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD). Since the Rio+20 Conference in 2012, the UNCCD has embraced the concept of land degradation neutrality. Land degradation neutrality (LDN) is further enshrined in policy in SDG target 15.3, which by 2030 aims to “combat desertification, and restore degraded

land and soil, including land affected by desertification, drought and floods, and strive to achieve a land-degradation neutral world.”9 LDN demands that land degradation is reduced through the use of SLM practices and that degraded land is restored. In practice, however, rehabilitation may be more achievable than restoration. The mining sector must contribute to efforts towards LDN for two main reasons. First, the sheer scale of environmental disruption means the industry could help make significant progress towards LDN. For example, the mining sector alone uses two-thirds of the overall electricity consumed in Zambia,10 while mining concessions account for more than 10 percent of the total landmass in countries such as Peru and Mexico.11 Only a fraction of these concessions is actively mined at any given point in time, so the proportion of land used for mining is much smaller than that used for agriculture. A crucial difference, however, is that mining uses land very intensively. In many cases, landscapes are altered so much that conventional restoration of disrupted ecosystems becomes difficult, if not impossible.12 Second, large multinational corporations (MNCs) dominate the mining sector. This means vast progress could potentially be made by focusing on just a small subset of actors.

In Brief Businesses that have large land footprints, like those in the mining sector, need to participate in efforts to achieve the international Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) target. Evidence shows that LDN also makes good business sense in terms of profitability, sustainability, and social responsibility. The current policy and economic contexts are nevertheless lacking in terms of both incentives and finance options. Solutions are needed to target these gaps. A certification system for LDN and/or sustainable land management (SLM) could stimulate interest in economic sectors that have otherwise not yet centrally engaged with SLM issues at a policy level, while also helping businesses to comply with new legislation on LDN. Similarly, lack of financing options for SLM and land rehabilitation could be addressed by a LDN fund. This could be constructed in an innovative public–private way that provides commercial loans and equity in investments, allowing new flows of finance into SLM and land rehabilitation.

www.thesolutionsjournal.org  |  September-October 2016  |  Solutions  |  55


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