Vice President Paa Kwesi Bekoe
Amissah-Arthur has said the country is developing policies that will re-align
mining contracts to match the Africa Mining Vision and the Mineral Development
Policy of Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).
For that reason Government is working to
create a strong but fair regulatory framework for the industry to ensure the
right policies and regulations are put in place for mining, to act as an agent
that catalyses development in the country.
Amissah-Arthur, speaking at the Ghana
Mining Summit, added that the efforts will also contribute to developing a
mining sector more closely linked to the economy locally, regionally and
nationally.
“In that connection, a comprehensive
review of the mining sector is underway; being designed to provide fairness and
equity, and at the same time provide the environment and opportunity for
enhanced investment in the sector,” the vice president announced.
The African Mining Vision was adopted at
the first African Union (AU) Conference of Ministers responsible for mineral
resources held in Addis Ababa in 2008.
The action-plan for this vision
comprises nine programme clusters of activities constructed around the key
pillars of the vision, namely: Mineral Rents and Management; Geological and
Mining Formation Systems; Building Human and Institutional Capacities;
Artisanal and Small Scale Mining; Mineral Sector Governance; Research and
Development; Environmental and Social issues; and Linkages as well as
Diversification.
These are aimed at creating mutually
beneficial partnerships between the state, private sector, civil society and
local communities. It also seeks to create a knowledge-driven sector that
catalyses and contributes to broad-based growth and development -- and is fully
integrated into a single African market.
Amissah-Arthur said Ghana’s response to
this action-plan was in three aspects: reviewing the sector’s governance and
regulatory regimes; reviewing contracts and incentive framework, specifically
stabilisation clauses and transfer pricing; as well as community issues and
community participation, recognising that mining needs to support rural
livelihoods.
He believed that mining must create
employment, provide fair economic returns to the communities where it is
carried out, and must protect the environment -- adding that “it is in light of
this that the minerals development fund is being considered to ensure local-
focused infrastructural and economic development in the mining communities.”
The vice president assured that
Government is committed to prudent utilisation of mineral revenues for the full
benefit of the whole country.
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