Mesa de la Sociedad Civil para la transparencia en las Industrias Extractivas https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/ Fri, 16 Jun 2023 17:31:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/favicon-1.jpg Mesa de la Sociedad Civil para la transparencia en las Industrias Extractivas https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/ 32 32 Colombia’s General Royalties System: a mechanism that contributes to regional development, overshadowed by a dark history of corruption https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/news/news-from-organizations-en/colombias-general-royalties-system-a-mechanism-that-contributes-to-regional-development-overshadowed-by-a-dark-history-of-corruption/ Thu, 27 Apr 2023 15:55:20 +0000 https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/uncategorized/colombias-general-royalties-system-a-mechanism-that-contributes-to-regional-development-overshadowed-by-a-dark-history-of-corruption/ In November 2022, the Congress of the Republic approved the budget bill for the General Royalties System (SGR) for the 2023-2024 biennium, for an amount of $31.3 trillion, equivalent to 2.1% of Colombia’s GDP. With that money, it would cover about six times the budget of a department such as Antioquia, which by 2023 is ... Read more

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In November 2022, the Congress of the Republic approved the budget bill for the General Royalties System (SGR) for the 2023-2024 biennium, for an amount of $31.3 trillion, equivalent to 2.1% of Colombia’s GDP. With that money, it would cover about six times the budget of a department such as Antioquia, which by 2023 is set at 5.4 billion; or ten times that of Valle del Cauca, which is around 3 billion this year.

This $31.1 billion, which enters the country as an economic benefit for the exploitation of non-renewable natural resources, will be distributed as designated in the SGR, and of this amount, $10.1 billion will be allocated to the country’s departments and regions for the approval of high regional impact projects; $3.4 billion will finance projects in science, technology and innovation; $3.4 billion will finance projects to stabilize and transform the territories most affected by violence, poverty, illicit economies and institutional weakness. (see budget distribution).

According to Mapa Inversiones, so far in 2023, 3,827 SGR projects have been approved, with an investment of $5 trillion, of which $284 billion have already been executed, in different sectors such as: agriculture, culture, transportation, science, technology and innovation, among others.

To better monitor these projects, organizations such as Transparencia por Colombia have mapped, promoted and provided different tools to promote higher levels of transparency and access to information in the extractive sector. Among these tools are
INFOBPIN
a technological platform where you can track the identification number of royalty investment projects (BPIN) ( See more tools here).

In addition, the country has been able to make progress in different areas such as social investment or even the construction of tertiary roads, with the use of royalties. Colombia has known initiatives that stand out for the good use and management of these resources, such as the interconnection of ancestral roads by the U’wa community in Boyacá or at the University of Caldas, with a project on biotechnology for waste utilization.

In this regard, the National Planning Department (DNP) and the Universidad del Rosario have an initiative that measures the best projects in the country and the best entities, respectively, within these six categories stand out as: Closing Gaps, Innovation and Orange Economy, Sustainable Income Generation, Environmental Sustainability, Regional Integration and Health Emergency Mitigation. All with a positive impact on the regions.

Another face

Despite the positive impact of the General Royalties System in the regions, corruption has also permeated these monies that belong to Colombians.

For example, the Office of the Comptroller General of the Republic found losses in the resources of the General Royalties System in the Department of Magdalena for $26,520 million due to lack of planning, as well as non-compliance in auditing activities and undelivered works, in an audit carried out in 2021, according to information published on the entity’s web page.

In addition to this, this same entity also found that between 2012 and 2017, about $840,000 million of fiscal incidence in royalty resources were reported, i.e. “works at risk of generating losses for this figure”.

And these scandals have also reached the national media, such as one that came to light in June of last year related to the OCAD Paz. Blu Radio denounced serious irregularities that would have been related to the allocation of these resources and where it is estimated, according to the media, that $500 billion were lost in bribe payments. Among those involved are, paradoxically, officials of the Comptroller’s Office, as well as officials of the DNP and different contractors and congressmen.

Camilo Vallejo, coordinator of the Transparency Observatory of the University of Manizales, assures that the loss of this public money is serious, and even worse, that entities such as the Comptroller’s Office sometimes fall short in their function. He also assures that as long as there is no sanction against the corrupt, there will be no significant progress.

It also warns about how entities that manage these resources do not comply with disclosing quality information or uploading it completely to the different platforms for citizen control. “We have found royalty projects that appeared blank. The government has many strategies, but does not comply with them, they believe that transparency is not relevant,” he comments.

Although, as Camilo mentions, there are information disclosure strategies on investments with royalty resources, for him, these fall short and he assures that beyond the strategies, there must be a commitment of the entities with transparency, and explains that public information must go beyond telling who was assigned the contract, and tell citizens the public information of these projects.

The deficiency in information, the limitations for citizen control of the resources destined to some projects, says Camilo, limits the role of citizens, who, although they are aware of these resources, encounter barriers when they want to access information and consult it in a transparent manner.

The Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries works on the follow-up and strengthening of transparency mechanisms in the General Royalties System – SGR, seeking to ensure that the objectives of transparency, oversight and access to public information are maintained at the highest level, as well as the effective participation of citizens in the approval and follow-up process of projects financed with royalty resources.

For more information write to: secretariatecnica@transparenciacolombia.org.co

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Keys to progress in the fight against illegal mining in Colombia https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/news/industry-news-en/keys-to-progress-in-the-fight-against-illegal-mining-in-colombia/ Wed, 26 Apr 2023 23:35:20 +0000 https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/uncategorized/keys-to-progress-in-the-fight-against-illegal-mining-in-colombia/ Illegal mining in Colombia crosses and violates all kinds of borders, from geographic, human rights of the communities living in the territories where these natural resources are exploited, to environmental, social and economic ones. Different types of mining converge on the mining map in Colombia, such as those that are governed by a legal framework, ... Read more

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Illegal mining in Colombia crosses and violates all kinds of borders, from geographic, human rights of the communities living in the territories where these natural resources are exploited, to environmental, social and economic ones.

Different types of mining converge on the mining map in Colombia, such as those that are governed by a legal framework, as in the case of mining. formal o legal which meets the different requirements of Colombian law for the exploitation of natural resources and generally occurs on a large scale; and artisanal o ancestralThe activity carried out traditionally and using little technology and machinery, on a small scale.

On the other hand, there is mining that is not legal, also known as informal or illegal mining.The mining that is carried out without a duly registered mining title, but without the involvement of illegal actors, as well as mining that has illegal armed actors behind it and that is related to other crimes such as drug trafficking or money laundering. However, the State, organizations and other actors generally do not differentiate between informal mining and mining promoted by criminal groups.

According to a 2022 report by the Comptroller General’s Office, illegal mining is destroying Colombia’s rivers, and about 85 percent of the gold exported by the country is the product of this activity.

Transparencia por Colombia explains on its website: “Illegal mining is one of the main causes of deforestation and environmental contamination in Colombia. To start illegal mining operations it is necessary to raze large areas of forest, leaving much of the biodiversity without habitat”.

Other forms of mining affected by criminality

The environment is not the only one affected by this activity, which is mainly focused on gold mining, although other metals such as platinum and silver are also mined.

Esteban Martínez, of the Colombian Mining Dialogue Group (GDIAM), assures that, in the midst of the struggle to put an end to this type of activity, artisanal, formal and informal miners have been stigmatized by society, the public forces and the media, in addition to being extorted and abused by the criminal groups and structures behind illegal mining.

Clear legislation

Martínez stresses that in order to put an end to mining promoted by criminal groups, there must first be legal clarity: “The big problem starts because in Colombia there is no differentiated regulation, we must distinguish the actors and the different types of mining, so as not to confuse legal, artisanal, informal miners with criminals,” he mentions, and adds that the first step to start winning that fight against mining promoted by illegal groups, beyond detonating yellow machinery, is to have clear rules and protect the other types of miners; in addition to a strong presence of all state actors, not only army or police, also educational offerings, productive alternatives, among others.

In addition to this proposal, Isabel Blandón Jaramillo, executive director of Fundación Atabaque, believes that another challenge to reduce or counteract this type of mining is the correct implementation of the Peace Agreements, which would also include a high institutional presence of the State, and where economic reincorporation is involved in regions where mining activities are the economic base, taking into account that in most of these areas there is a high presence of illicit crops, such as coca.

Departments such as Antioquia, Chocó, Bolívar, Córdoba and Amazonas are the main ones affected by mining financed by criminal groups, specifically gold mining, according to the report. Alluvial gold mining. Evidence from remote sensing 2020′. presented by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and supported by the U.S. Embassy in Colombia and the Ministry of Mines and Energy. This report also mentions that 69 % of the mining activity detected is illegal.

Guarantees and transparency

*Humberto Salazar has worked in informal mining for more than 30 years, in departments such as Antioquia and Risaralda, he comments that he learned to live with illegal groups in order to work, but mentions the effects it has had on his work:

“Sometimes you have to risk your life living with these groups, because they don’t care about anything, they come to a river or a piece of land and destroy everything, without a care in the world. There are rapes, extortions and murders in between,” he says.

It demands guarantees from the government. Humberto explains that he and other miners do not dare to denounce because “the government promises but does not deliver” and to make a complaint in a territory dominated by illegal groups that infiltrate society is “to have death assured”, he explains.

State presence and joint work

Non-governmental organizations such as the Alliance for Responsible Mining (ARM) believe that a greater and better presence of the State, including a quality institutional offer in areas where mining by illegal groups is advancing, would help to combat it. There must be incentives from the State for miners to formalize: “In some cases the armed groups themselves are the ones who limit the participation of citizens, miners and mining companies in dialogue scenarios where initiatives can emerge to combat the phenomenon and, in general, to seek solutions to the challenges of their territory,” explains Jose Luis Gil, ARM’s governance officer.

It also discusses the role that extractive industries should play in contributing to these struggles. “In many territories the extractive industries coexist with artisanal and informal miners, in this case, the will of the companies and the State is essential, because they could help train them, support them in their formalization process, this is a way to bring these people closer to legality and control so that they do not fall into criminal mining.”

Isabel Blandón highlights the importance of a coordinated work at different levels, from local to national, as well as a mining planning that is equitable among the different social, economic, political and environmental sectors. “Mining management should be thought not only from the cycle of extractive projects to give line to the legal and regulatory, but from the social, cultural and environmental dynamics of the territories and regions where extractive activities occur in their various scales, thus, the state presence should be thought from a mining management that bets on a mining governance focused on human rights perspective, biological, cultural and obviously an approach based on conflicts, “he says.

Lost track

According to experts, one of the factors favoring armed actors sponsoring gold mining is that this precious metal can be easily traded and transported around the world and there is no traceability, i.e. the trail is lost when it is sold. In this way, illegal groups take advantage of this opportunity to launder money and finance criminal activities.

One of the problems in tracing gold, explains Isabel Blandón, is that in Colombia this issue has mainly focused on documentary traceability, and not on a broader one that involves processes of analysis, monitoring of land risks, among others, in order to reduce the room for maneuver of actors behind the mining promoted by criminal gangs.

Despite the efforts made by the State, illegal mining is advancing and in turn devouring the environment, the Comptroller’s Office calls this phenomenon: “environmental massacre”.

Proposals

Civil society organizations working on behalf of artisanal and informal miners have come up with participation initiatives to support this struggle and proposals such as providing and training the population in monitoring methods that provide technical inputs to demand State action, quantifying and having a secure information system to monitor informal mining and extractive activities financed by criminality, training the security forces so that in their interventions they know how to differentiate the different types of miners, having a large mining company in Colombia, as contemplated in the National Development Plan, that serves to formalize the mining sector in Colombia, and having a large mining company in Colombia, as contemplated in the National Development Plan, that serves to formalize the mining sector, to train the security forces so that in their interventions they know how to differentiate between the different types of miners, to have a large mining company in Colombia, as contemplated in the National Development Plan, which will serve to formalize the artisanal sector, to have a trace of the gold that leaves Colombia to the world, among other benefits.

Transparency and citizen participation, which the Mesa de la Sociedad Civil para la Transparencia en las Industrias Extractivas is working for, are key factors in addressing social and environmental challenges such as crime-sponsored mining and illegal mining. When the different stakeholders – miners, civil society organizations and government – work together they can establish a solid foundation for responsible and sustainable decision making.

For more information, please write to: secretariatecnica@transparenciacolombia.org.co

*Name has been changed at the request of the source to protect his identity.

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The road to renewable energies https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/news/industry-news-en/the-road-to-renewable-energies/ Tue, 28 Feb 2023 17:56:08 +0000 https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/uncategorized/the-road-to-renewable-energies/ The importance of transparency and citizen participation in energy transition   For Mariela Cardona, cooking with firewood and gasoline is just a memory in the farm where she lived her youth in a village of Aguadas, Caldas. The transition from cooking with wood to cooking with gas was slow, but by the late 1990s it ... Read more

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The importance of transparency and citizen participation in energy transition

 

For Mariela Cardona, cooking with firewood and gasoline is just a memory in the farm where she lived her youth in a village of Aguadas, Caldas. The transition from cooking with wood to cooking with gas was slow, but by the late 1990s it had been achieved. He did so because he listened to his neighbors and city officials talk about the advantages this change would bring to human health and the environment.

As in the case of Mariela, the energy transition aims to reduce the consumption of coal, oil and gas as the main source of energy, in order to advance in the implementation of clean and renewable energies, environmentally friendly, such as hydroelectric, wind, solar, biomass, among others. This transition has the same objective that was pursued at the time of stopping cooking with wood or gasoline: to take care of people’s health and mitigate the adverse effects of climate change.

The world is betting on change

Countries such as Norway, Iceland and Denmark are among those leading this change in Europe, according to the Fostering Effective Energy Transition report , 2021 edition.

In Latin America, the initiative is also opening up ground with countries such as Uruguay, which between 2017 and 2021 generated 94% of electricity through renewable sources, according to information from that country’s Ministry of Industry, Energy and Mining. In recent years, Colombia has been following these steps and is working on actions to strengthen the energy transition at the regional level. For example, the current government, headed by President Gustavo Petro, released the text of the National Development Plan 2023-2026, Colombia World Power of Lifewhich has 5 major goals, one of which is the Productive Transformation, Internationalization and Climate ActionThe proposal is to promote the energy transition based on the “diversification of productive activities that take advantage of natural capital and deepen the use of clean energy, that are intensive in knowledge and innovation, that respect and guarantee human rights, and that contribute to building resilience to climate shocks.”.

In addition, the country’s goal is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 51% by 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2050, according to the Carbon Neutral Colombia Strategy (ECCN) under the leadership of the Ministry of Environment and Sustainable Development.

People first

According to Juliana Peña Niño, from the Natural Resource Governance Institute
[1]
1], for the energy transition to be successful, it must be focused on citizens. “Transitions are changes that are planned and are hand in hand with the participation of communities and key stakeholders,” she says.

He assures that these dialogues should have a differential approach according to the regions, in order to address the economic, political, social and environmental needs of each territory. “Legitimacy and dialogue is different in a region like La Guajira, Cesar or the Colombian Amazon. It is to understand that there are differential production chains“.

Juliana is also emphatic in mentioning that governments and companies as part of the energy transition must generate regional intervention mechanisms, participation methodologies, and the publication of information in different formats and languages that are easy to access and understand, so that citizens understand the consequences and needs of the transition: “We are convinced that the energy transition will have a positive impact on our society.We must go beyond just making the information public, we must explain it, make sure it is understood, in order to reduce asymmetries with the citizens, to guarantee the success of the transition“.

Increased citizen participation

Although the Political Constitution of Colombia and different laws such as the Statutory Law on Citizen Participation, Law 1712 of 2014 on Transparency, offer legal guarantees for citizen participation and cooperation mechanisms for civil society organizations, for some experts these tools fall short and sometimes, in practice, there are no guarantees for their due compliance.

Óscar Iván Galvis Mora, from the Colombian Strategy for Adapted and Resilient Low Carbon Development, assures that the information that exists is not in a clear and simple language for an ordinary citizen to understand and take action.

You can find documents on energy transition, but some are still very technical, which creates a constraint on access to information.“He also explains the importance of dialoguing with communities and making information available to all, including digital platforms, but also methodologies for people who do not have access to them. He even proposes going beyond the Spanish language, recalling that there are different indigenous communities that do not have access to this information in their own languages.

Both experts highlight the importance of the articulation of different citizens’ organizations such as NGOs, foundations, grassroots communities and other civil society organizations so that their voices are heard and taken into account in the formulation of public policies. An example of this is the Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries, which promotes access to information and citizen participation in issues related to the energy transition based on the contributions of the more than 20 organizations that comprise it.

In response to the questions posed for this report, Mariela Cardona, who switched from firewood to natural gas, opens Google, presses voice search and asks: “Energy transition in Colombia”, the search engine returns several results that shed some light, but he wonders why most of the information that appears comes from the media, the national government and very little from the Extractive Industries? Evidencing that the work must continue along these lines.

For more information, please write to: secretariatecnica@transparenciacolombia.org.co

 

[1] Organización miembro de la Mesa de la Sociedad Civil para la Transparencia en las Industrias Extractivas.

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Mesa de la Sociedad Civil para la Transparencia en las Industrias Extractivas was selected for its contribution to the development of Latin America and the Caribbean. https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/news/board-news-en/mesa-de-la-sociedad-civil-para-la-transparencia-en-las-industrias-extractivas-was-selected-for-its-contribution-to-the-development-of-latin-america-and-the-caribbean/ Fri, 24 Feb 2023 18:01:13 +0000 https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/uncategorized/mesa-de-la-sociedad-civil-para-la-transparencia-en-las-industrias-extractivas-was-selected-for-its-contribution-to-the-development-of-latin-america-and-the-caribbean/ Bogotá, February 24, 2023 The Mesa welcomed its selection by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) as an organization that contributes to the region’s development. The Mesa de la Sociedad Civil para la Transparencia en las Industrias Extractivas brings together more than 26 organizations at the national level, with the vision of generating a consolidated and ... Read more

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Bogotá, February 24, 2023

The Mesa welcomed its selection by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) as an organization that contributes to the region’s development.

The Mesa de la Sociedad Civil para la Transparencia en las Industrias Extractivas brings together more than 26 organizations at the national level, with the vision of generating a consolidated and strong civil society movement with a high degree of influence in the public and private sector related to the Extractive Industries in Colombia. With this, it seeks to fulfill its mission to achieve higher levels of transparency, citizen participation, accountability processes and access to public information in the Colombian extractive sector.

For its work, the Mesa has been included in the IDB’s WiConnect platform, which seeks to provide access to grant information, call for proposals, frontier information on the sector, as well as to support the organization by making it visible to donors, other specialists and organizations working in Latin America and the Caribbean. This recognition encourages us to continue working towards transparency and strengthening the participation of civil society from our strategic lines on issues related to EITI, royalties and access to information on environmental issues.

Link on WiCoonect: https://bit.ly/3KDtdyU

For more information, please write to: secretariatecnica@transparenciacolombia.org.co

 

 

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Civil society input to the EITI 2022 validation process: Espacio Cívico Report and recommendations to EITI Colombia https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/news/industry-news-en/civil-society-input-to-the-eiti-2022-validation-process-espacio-civico-report-and-recommendations-to-eiti-colombia/ Thu, 29 Dec 2022 21:11:56 +0000 https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/uncategorized/civil-society-input-to-the-eiti-2022-validation-process-espacio-civico-report-and-recommendations-to-eiti-colombia/ Bogotá, December 29, 2022 The Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in Industries Extractive presents to the general public the Civic Space in Colombia Report (2019-2022) presented in the framework of the EITI 2022 validation, which concludes that difficulties, risks, restrictions and alarms persist in the generation of an enabling environment for the effective participation of ... Read more

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Bogotá, December 29, 2022

The Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in Industries Extractive presents to the general public the Civic Space in Colombia Report (2019-2022) presented in the framework of the EITI 2022 validation, which concludes that difficulties, risks, restrictions and alarms persist in the generation of an enabling environment for the effective participation of citizens in the governance of their natural resources, and shows how socio-environmental conflicts and violence in the context in which extractive industries operate generate fear and resistance on the part of civil society to exercise control, dialogue and use information from EITI reports in public decision-making processes. It also presents the document of EITI Colombia’s assessments and recommendations to EITI Colombia on 6 priority issues for civil societywith the The purpose of addressing the demands, needs and opportunities for improvement in the implementation of the standard in the country, so that these can be reflected in the National Action Plan (NAP) in the next term of the EITI Colombia process.

The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (
EITI
) is a global standard that promotes open and accountable management of oil, gas and mineral resources, and seeks to strengthen the governance of natural resources in the Colombian extractive sector. In our country, through a tripartite dialogue table, EITI Colombia seeks to consolidate relations and generate quality information by means of an articulated work between private companies, government and civil society. To this end, reports and some thematic studies on the management of emerging resources in the value chain of this industry are published annually, based on 7 requirements:

In 2022, the second EITI validation process began in Colombia. This process is a mechanism in which the country is assessed on its ability to comply with the provisions of the EITI Standard and the quality assurance of the information reported. Following the guidelines established by EITI at the international level for this purpose, the Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries developed two key inputs to support its positions and the situation that citizens have historically faced in terms of access to information, participation and the search for transparency in the extractive industry.

The first document emerged from the work of the Mesa’s EITI subcommittee, in which 6 priority themes were selected based on the experiences of different civil society organizations at the national level. Based on them, research work was initiated to diagnose and evaluate key aspects, their progress and opportunities for improvement. Thus, in each of these items, a series of recommendations were formulated to address the gaps identified and strengthen the implementation of EITI in Colombia. Several of these recommendations were related to issues such as: disaggregation of data, institutional articulation, improvement of CTN governance mechanisms, use of clear language, implementation of a differential approach, development of training and advocacy strategies, adaptation to citizens’ demands for information, importance of a socio-environmental context and, especially, the inclusion of priority issues for civil society in the preparation of the next NAP.

The second is a detailed report on the status of Civic Space in Colombia, during the period 2019-2022, which was developed with the support and funding from

Publish What You Pay

-a global civil society network of which the Mesa is a member. This report is of great importance for the validation process, as it evaluates each component of the EITI Civil Society Protocol.
EITI Protocol for Civil Society
(expression, operation, association, participation, access to public decision making, available documentation) in Colombia. This document gathers interventions from Mesa organizations, external social organizations, grassroots communities, academia and experts. In this paper, the importance of placing greater emphasis on understanding the context experienced by communities and social leaders living in areas of influence of extractive operations is exposed, since, in practice, risks, fears and warnings are evident for their effective participation in decision-making scenarios, despite the existence of legal frameworks that provide that there must be legal guarantees in these scenarios. Since there are no spaces for debate, there is no use of the EITI information, therefore, recommendations are made, among others, to include the socio-environmental context, ensure the implementation of the Protocol for Civil Society, elaborate a protection strategy for social leaders, encourage the participation of ethnic communities and civil society organizations that are not members of the Mesa.

The Working Group invites you to read and use the information contained in these documents to reflect on the role of the EITI in the protection and promotion of citizen participation, the challenges of strategies for access and use of information, and the generation of spaces for dialogue and informed debate and its impact on the country.

About the Table

In the Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries we promote citizen participation and access to information, with a platform of more than twenty social organizations and academic institutions from different regions of the country, which jointly carry out research, advocacy and citizen control activities regarding transparency in the extractive sector.

For more information, please write to: secretariatecnica@transparenciacolombia.org.co

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Agenda with 75 proposals for the post-extractivist transition in Colombia https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/uncategorized/agenda-con-75-propuestas-para-la-transicion-post-extractivista-en-colombia/ Mon, 26 Sep 2022 17:19:22 +0000 https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/uncategorized/agenda-con-75-propuestas-para-la-transicion-post-extractivista-en-colombia/ This Agenda is the result of the reflection that the National Forum for Colombia and the Central Region Forum – members of the Civil Society Table for Transparency in the Extractive Industries – have been carrying out in the last ten years on the role of extractive activity in the country, through studies carried out ... Read more

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This Agenda is the result of the reflection that the National Forum for Colombia and the Central Region Forum – members of the Civil Society Table for Transparency in the Extractive Industries – have been carrying out in the last ten years on the role of extractive activity in the country, through studies carried out by the Extractive Industries Observatory, and contact with local communities and a wide range of social organizations with which they work in their regions of influence.

 

Productive diversification, climate change and governance of the extractive sector: 75 proposals for a transition agenda in Colombia is the title of the publication of Foro Región Central and Foro Nacional por Colombia, which had the support of Brot für die Welt and Ford Foundation, which presents the result of more than ten years of systematic analysis on the behavior of mining and hydrocarbons in the country. The Agenda raises several important issues for the current debate on the construction of a fairer, more sustainable and equitable development model in Colombia, with the participation of the communities in the decisions that are made regarding the territory, the economy and the protection of the environment. .

The Agenda presents a diagnosis of the results of public policies promoted by recent governments that have favored the exploitation and export of minerals and hydrocarbons. In addition, it shows the inconvenience of the extractivist emphasis of our development model, since it has generated a reprimarization of the economy – that is, the economy has been based on activities of the primary or extractive sector – without generating the positive impact on formal employment that It is expected and has put the country in a very vulnerable situation in the face of fluctuations in the international prices of raw materials.

Likewise, it draws attention to the sector, since despite the impacts generated by large farms in the territories and their population – as well as in the ecosystems and the sustainability of fauna and flora, rivers and sources of water – A large part of the communities and local authorities are excluded from decisions about mining and hydrocarbons. This fact has become one of the main sources of social conflicts in Colombia and is related to the threats and deaths of social leaders who seek to defend their territory from extractive projects.

The Agenda points out a route to advance in the discussion of a development model less dependent on minerals and hydrocarbons. There are 75 proposals in terms of productive diversification, energy transition and governance. Each of them identifies the measures that the government can adopt, the institutional changes that are required, the fiscal resources that must be available, and the role of public, private, and social actors in this process.

In terms of productive diversification, the country must considerably reduce its high dependence on the income generated by the export of minerals and hydrocarbons, because most of the economic blocks have proposed measures to reduce the use of these fuels and if the country does not align to these measures and does not encourage the growth of other productive sectors, could experience a deep economic crisis in the medium term.

An issue of great relevance is the energy transition, on which Colombia must give a serious discussion to change its consumption matrix, including renewable energy sources and, in addition, with the duty to reduce its contribution to the international inventory of polluting emissions due to its export of oil and coal. This is in harmony with the climate change agenda that requires urgent measures from all states to stop an environmental catastrophe in the coming decades, the need to protect water sources and nature, and the importance of conserving the livelihoods of communities. .

Also, the Governance Agenda outlines measures to promote dialogue between the nation and the territories, to reach agreements on a fairer development model, and proposes strategies to include citizen participation in public policy decisions, with actions to guarantee transparent rules of the game for all stakeholders interested in contributing to the development of the country.

Finally, this Agenda proposes a transition approach with a time horizon of ten to fifteen years, understanding that it is not possible to change the extractivist economic approach overnight. Therefore, progressive measures must be included so that a negative impact is not generated on the income of the State and on the territories that depend on mining and hydrocarbons. Likewise, it makes a call to implement institutional, regulatory and policy changes that must be specified, carried out and guarantee their continuity.

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This document will be presented at an event called Just and Sustainable Post-Extractivist Transition in Colombia: Challenges and Proposals, which is organized by Foro Región Central, Foro Nacional por Colombia and the Faculty of Finance, Government and International Relations of the Externado de Colombia University.

The event will take place next Thursday, September 29 at the Externado de Colombia University: calle 12 # 1 – 17 Este from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. to 12:00 p.m. Registration is enabled at the following link: https://bit.ly/3U8LBlu (limited capacity).

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Escazú will have its second debate this Tuesday, May 17 in the Colombian Congress. https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/news/industry-news-en/escazu-tendra-su-segundo-debate-este-martes-17-de-mayo-en-el-congreso-de-colombia/ Tue, 17 May 2022 17:25:30 +0000 https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/uncategorized/escazu-tendra-su-segundo-debate-este-martes-17-de-mayo-en-el-congreso-de-colombia/ The Escazú Agreement seeks to guarantee access to environmental information, citizen participation in decision-making, access to justice, and capacity building for sustainable development. Bogotá, May 17, 2022 On April 26, the Second Committee of the Senate approved in the first debate Bill 251 of 2021, which seeks to ratify the Escazú Agreement, which aims to ... Read more

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The Escazú Agreement seeks to guarantee access to environmental information, citizen participation in decision-making, access to justice, and capacity building for sustainable development.

Bogotá, May 17, 2022

On April 26, the Second Committee of the Senate approved in the first debate Bill 251 of 2021, which seeks to ratify the Escazú Agreement, which aims to reduce socio-environmental conflicts, guaranteeing access to environmental information, public participation in environmental decision-making and access to justice in environmental matters. In addition, Escazú seeks the protection of environmental leaders.
Therefore, the second debate to be held this Tuesday, May 17 at 3:00 p.m., which seeks to ratify Colombia’s accession to the Escazú Agreement, is of utmost importance. For this debate, the discussion of the positive report authored by senators Iván Cepeda, Feliciano Valencia and Antonio Sanguino is scheduled, who hope to have a quorum in the plenary and that the government majorities do not delay the ratification of the agreement, despite the fact that it was the same government that presented the bill to ratify it during the last legislature.

The importance of this agreement for Colombia lies in the considerable number of environmental conflicts and the difficult situation of environmental leaders, as it is the most risky country to assume this role in Latin America and the Caribbean. Its implementation can substantially improve access to environmental information and citizen participation in environmental decision-making, as well as access to justice in matters involving the use of natural resources.

From the Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries we call on the Senators of the Republic to ratify the Escazú Agreement, in order to mitigate the socio-environmental problems that afflict much of the national territory and with a view to the 2030 Agenda and the fulfillment of the Sustainable Development Goals.

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The XXVI Meeting of the Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries was successfully held. https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/news/board-news-en/se-realizo-de-manera-satisfactoria-la-xxvi-reunion-de-la-mesa-de-la-sociedad-civil-para-la-transparencia-en-las-industrias-extractivas/ Tue, 03 May 2022 17:31:14 +0000 https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/uncategorized/se-realizo-de-manera-satisfactoria-la-xxvi-reunion-de-la-mesa-de-la-sociedad-civil-para-la-transparencia-en-las-industrias-extractivas/ On April 26, the XXVI Meeting of the Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries was held in Bogota, with the participation of delegations that are part of the roundtable at the national level. The meeting began with a presentation by Noel Murray (executive director of Directorio Legislativo) of the “Joining The Dots” ... Read more

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On April 26, the XXVI Meeting of the Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries was held in Bogota, with the participation of delegations that are part of the roundtable at the national level.

The meeting began with a presentation by Noel Murray (executive director of Directorio Legislativo) of the “Joining The Dots” project, which seeks to explore information on the assets of public officials; public contracting; and tenders in the extractive sector, in order to identify possible conflicts of interest, corruption or improper use of public office. Murray was accompanied by Mark Robinson, EITI executive director, and Francisco París, EITI director for Latin America and the Caribbean.

This presentation, in addition to the participation of the Mesa’s social organizations, included interventions by Claudia Báez, a journalist from Cuestión Pública, and the data expert organization Datasketch, who positively valued the effort of cross-checking data to find possible conflicts of interest of public officials in the extractive sector. A webcast of this presentation can be found on the Bureau’s Facebook page.

Subsequently, a panel was held on the progress of the Subnational EITI, in which the Technical Secretariat of EITI Colombia presented the current status of the implementation of the EITI standard in the prioritized territories: Boyacá, Casanare, Cesar and Santander. On the civil society side, ABC Colombia and the CSIR Cesar participated, commenting on the views from their territories on the processes being carried out in the formation of the local committees.

Francisco París, for his part, highlighted the role of civil society in the EITI standard validation process that Colombia will begin in the second half of the year. “You are going to be consulted, that’s part of the spirit of the standard. There will be many opportunities to hear your voice in the validation. And the best of luck for Colombia to do justice to your efforts,” he said.

Presentations were also made on the Anti-Corruption Legal Advice Center (ALAC) and the initiative on whistleblowing and whistleblower protection in the context of extractive sector operations, by the Transparency for Colombia corporation.

The meeting culminated with an intervention by the organizations representing civil society before the National Tripartite Committee, which, together with the government and the private sector, coordinates actions for the continuation of the work within the framework of the EITI initiative. These are Crudo Transparente, Fundación Atabaque and Transparencia por Colombia.

The Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries emerged in 2013 and currently brings together more than twenty social organizations and academic institutions from different parts of the country. Its objective is to seek higher levels of transparency and access to public information in the Colombian extractive sector.

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Statement by the Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries on the Escazú Agreement https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/news/board-news-en/pronunciamiento-de-la-mesa-de-la-sociedad-civil-para-la-transparencia-en-las-industrias-extractivas-sobre-el-acuerdo-de-escazu/ Mon, 25 Apr 2022 17:34:48 +0000 https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/uncategorized/pronunciamiento-de-la-mesa-de-la-sociedad-civil-para-la-transparencia-en-las-industrias-extractivas-sobre-el-acuerdo-de-escazu/ Colombian organizations ask Congress to urgently ratify Escazú Agreement Given the alarming situation of those who defend the environment in Colombia and the lack of guarantees in the protection of ecosystems, as well as the barriers that prevent effective citizen participation in environmental decision making, the Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries ... Read more

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Colombian organizations ask Congress to urgently ratify Escazú Agreement

Given the alarming situation of those who defend the environment in Colombia and the lack of guarantees in the protection of ecosystems, as well as the barriers that prevent effective citizen participation in environmental decision making, the Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries
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requests the Congress of the Republic to ratify the Regional Agreement on Access to Information, Public Participation and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters in Latin America and the Caribbean(Escazú Agreement).), doing so will be an important and positive step towards ensuring the sustainable development of the country, based on respect for the planet or the Common House, with a focus on human rights, social justice and citizen participation, as well as guaranteeing the right to life of environmental leaders.

In this sense, and as organizations that seek transparency in extractive regions, we insist on the ratification of Escazú. This treaty is a vital tool for regulating environmental rights in three main aspects: Access to Information, Citizen Participation and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters. Not ratifying it would be a sign of a Congress that lacks will and prevents the country from complying with this commitment in the framework of compliance with the protection of human rights and respect for the lives of those who protect the environment.

Since 2019, within the framework of the Great National Conversation, the Colombian government signed the Agreement before the United Nations. In 2020 it was submitted with a message of urgency by President Iván Duque, and in 2021 it was again submitted to Congress due to pressure from social and environmental groups.

However, since its filing, the bill to ratify the regional treaty has made little progress in the current Congress; only two public hearings were held in 2021. Furthermore, despite its urgency message in 2020, it did not even make it to the first debate, even though it was on the agenda of the Second Committee.

In view of these delaying actions -which show the lack of commitment before the international community- and despite the fact that there are only a few weeks left in the last legislative period of the Government of Iván Duque, the Government’s opposition managed to set the agenda for the discussion of the Escazú Agreement in the Second Committee of the Senate for April 26, 2022.

We insist on the urgency of incorporating this treaty into our legislation, a tool that we hope will allow us to work towards ceasing to be the most dangerous country in the world for environmental leaders and thereby reduce the extreme vulnerability of ecologists, indigenous peoples and environmental defenders in Colombia. As indicated by the international report of Global Witness, by 2020, 65 murders of environmental defenders were recorded and in 2021, 56 homicides have already been counted, placing us for the second consecutive year as the most dangerous country in the world for environmental leaders.

It is worth mentioning that in January 2022 the first murder of an environmental defender was a minor; a member of the indigenous reservation Las Delicias (Cauca), whose voice was extinguished. Likewise, the Investigation and Indictment Unit of the Special Jurisdiction for Peace – JEP warned in recent weeks that the department of Santander is where most threats against environmental leaders are registered.

Let this be the opportunity to request as the Civil Society Roundtable for Transparency in the Extractive Industries, that the commitment to strengthen transparency and accountability in the management of the extractive sectors through the implementation of the EITI Standard be fulfilled. The agreement was signed by Colombia in 2018 and is expected to be validated in 2022.

Finally, we recall that ratifying the Escazú Agreement brings us closer to ethical codes and consensus for the construction of the common good, and shows that Congress is on the side of the vast majority of citizens who expect greater guarantees for access to a decent life in Colombia.

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Third cycle of the dialogue on mining in ethnic territories https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/en/news/industry-news-en/tercer-ciclo-del-dialogo-sobre-mineria-en-territorios-etnicos/ Mon, 14 Mar 2022 17:35:53 +0000 https://mesatransparenciaextractivas.org/uncategorized/tercer-ciclo-del-dialogo-sobre-mineria-en-territorios-etnicos/ The virtual event “Cycles of intercultural dialogue in the mining context”, organized by the Alliance for Responsible Mining in collaboration with WWF Colombia, Foro Nacional por Colombia Chapter Central Region, the Dialogue Group on Mining in Colombia and with the support of the Ford Foundation, will be developed in a total of 18 virtual sessions, ... Read more

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The virtual event “Cycles of intercultural dialogue in the mining context”, organized by the Alliance for Responsible Mining in collaboration with WWF Colombia, Foro Nacional por Colombia Chapter Central Region, the Dialogue Group on Mining in Colombia and with the support of the Ford Foundation, will be developed in a total of 18 virtual sessions, one per week, and will bring together leaders, students and public officials working on mining issues in Colombia with special emphasis on ethnic territories.

Mining in ethnic territories is an issue in which ancestral practices, territorial rights, economic interests, environmental protection, land use planning, human rights, among other issues, converge, and is therefore not free of controversy and debate. An example of this is the tensions surrounding the full and transparent implementation of Free, Prior and Informed Consultation and Consent when authorizing mining projects (national and international) in ethnic territories and the current lack of an adequate legal and institutional framework, resulting from an authentic intercultural dialogue, for the use and exploitation of minerals by ethnic groups.

Cycle III: Conservation and Diversification in Pacific Mining Territories

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