From: Issue 41

Resource firms slowly embracing indigenous rights

13 December, 2012

Twenty-eight of the world’s biggest oil, gas and mining companies get a report card on their community consent policies

Written by James Munson, Contributor

Illustration Maxwell Neil Webb

The Achuar people of northern Peru came to Canada last April to have Talisman Energy’s drilling operations on their ancestral land stopped. The Calgary-based oil company failed to consult with them before drilling in the Amazonian rainforest, a delegation of Achuar leaders told politicians and journalists in Ottawa, a contention Talisman officials denied. Five months later, the firm announced it was pulling out of Peru for business reasons, while the Achuar and their advocates claimed local opposition made the oil prospect unviable.

Whether Achuar’s public outreach influenced Talisman to leave Peru or not, it comes at a time of increased visibility for indigenous peoples around the world who are opposing mining projects. And it’s being felt on the balance sheets of extractive companies.

The growing assertiveness of indigenous people – in an age of easy travel and even easier communication – has been made even more pervasive in the last decade by the industry’s entry into previously inaccessible regions for new resources, driven by historically high commodity prices.

The industry, sensing a problem that isn’t going away, has reacted. Sometimes in tandem with civil society and sometimes on their own, business leaders have put in place policies to measure and mitigate community opposition to projects that, as Talisman’s fruitless foray into the Amazon shows, can suck up valuable capital.

But the result has been a murky sea of feel-good concepts with little legal grounding or wide acceptance, leaving indigenous groups and their defenders with doubts about the industry’s sincerity.

One idea, however, is gaining ground as a future standard bearer for cooperation between companies and communities – an indigenous peoples’ right to free, prior and informed consent, or FPIC, over projects on their lands.

FPIC was entrenched in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in 2007. And though that doesn’t make it legally binding for member countries, the concept has since popped up in decisions by human rights councils and in the policies of companies themselves.

Oxfam America also sees FPIC as a way forward. In an effort to accelerate its acceptance by the extractives industry, Oxfam published a report in September that indexes the community consent policies of the world’s biggest oil, gas and mining companies.

While the index – which compares the depth, availability and legal footing of each policy – reveals major discrepancies in the ways companies view their duty to consult with indigenous people, the fact that over two dozen of the planet’s petroleum and mineral behemoths even have such policies can be considered a sea change for the industry.

“In the bad old days, for most mining and oil and gas companies, communities were, at most, maybe irrelevant to what the companies were doing, and perhaps just a nuisance,” said Chris Anderson, the communities and social performance director for the Americas at Rio Tinto, during a recent panel discussion hosted by Oxfam in Washington, D.C., to mark the index’s release.

For four months, the report’s authors, Emily Greenspan and Marianne Voss, read company websites, scoured online news stories and phoned up firms directly to determine the state of community consent policies in the extractives sector.

Greenspan and Voss cast a wide net and investigated nearly 40 firms. But only 28 ended up in the final 114-page report because they were the only ones to have publicly available policies. The authors also chose companies for their membership in industry groups with indigenous rights’ standards like the International Council on Mining and Metals (ICMM) and past collaboration with Oxfam. “This report is pretty much skewed,” said Anderson. “You haven’t looked at the worst actors in all of this and there are plenty around still.”

Greenspan, also speaking on the panel, admitted the index wasn’t exhaustive, but added that it wasn’t meant to be. It’s supposed to give a read on the quality of policies out there right now.

Share |

Featured Content from Issue 41 See all content

Report

The first-ever Canadian mining sustainability ranking explores which Canadian mining companies are taking the lead on sustainable measures of performance.

Report

Industry experts have compiled CK's 2012 Cleantech 10 and Next 10 list, a must-read annual snapshot of Canada's publicly traded leaders and up-and-coming startups.

Report

CK evaluates how effectively Standard and Poor's 500 top companies are incorporating gender diversity into their boards of directors

 

Report

Some firms perform better than others when it comes to following through on social and environmental responsibilities, as our first Global mining ranking demonstrates