Coltan mining and ethics

Coltan is the colloquial name for the mineral columbite-tantalum ("col-tan"). In the early 21st century coltan mining is associated with human rights violations such as child labour, systematic exploitation of the population by governments or militant groups, exposure to toxic chemicals and other hazards as a result of lax environmental protection, and general safety laws and regulations.[1]

A piece of Coltan
A piece of Coltan

Overview

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The coltan industry is worth tens of millions of dollars a year. The price for coltan ranged between $50 and $200 per pound in 2012[2] and has spiked much higher in the past when supplies were scarce. In 2006, Australia, Brazil, and Canada produced 80% of the world's coltan.[3] As of 2018, coltan's main producers are Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Nigeria, Brazil and China.[4][5] Australia, Canada and Mozambique are also important players.[6] Thus, the task of supplying world coltan needs has fallen largely on conflict regions and underdeveloped countries. The coltan market is characterized by opacity, as supply and trade is based on contracts that do not publish public price references.[7] The products are sold in private, unregulated markets,[8] unlike commodity metals like gold, copper, zinc, and tin.

The United Nations has taken an active role in assessing the state of the world's coltan industry and in 2003 has cited specifically the DRC as an example of a country where natural resource exploitation, "The flow of arms, exploitation and the continuation of the conflict are inextricably linked."[9]

Ethical issues

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Human rights

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Some notable similarities link mining practices in countries where they have come under fire:

The UN also considers developed countries that support conflict minerals violators of human rights for allowing the violations to continue rather than fulfilling and promoting the human rights set forth in the 1948 Declaration.[10]

Working conditions

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The UN has declared a right to choose one's employment and has also called safe working conditions a basic human right.[11] The violence in the regions that produce conflict coltan gives the population little choice about whether to mine coltan. In Central Africa, for example, gold mines are typically connected to militias.

Forced and child labour

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According to some activists, coltan mines in national reserves often forcibly use indigenous people for their operations. In Colombia - a very minor coltan producing country - the Puinawai natives call the coltan mines “guns, pointed at the earth beneath [the] sacred mountain."[12] A report by the Commission of the European Union in 2011 raised issues of child labour in coltan mining in DRC, and in the recycling industry in Ghana and China.[13]

Twenty years ago it was reported that children as young as twelve were working in some mines.[14] Amnesty International, in a joint investigation with African NGO African Resources Watch, in 2016 published a report that found that children even as young as seven years old are working in cobalt mines in the DRC.[15] The report says that children were beaten and forced to pay "fines" to state officials as bribes for money extortion and intimidation. Furthermore, a lack of protective gear, and long working hours were lamented.[15] Cobalt (element Co) mining is a totally different supply chain to coltan mining (elements Ta and Nb) and there is no geological overlap of resources or mines.

Mining and economic development

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Many of the burgeoning coltan producers are resource-rich developing countries with economies that are currently largely dependent on mining non-renewable resources. This indicates a danger attached to even clean coltan operations in developing countries. Groups that study developing nations such as Oxfam caution against a developing country putting much of its capital into mining operations, especially single mineral developments. While countries like the United States, Canada, and Australia were able to turn their mining operations into profitable industries, these experiences are not practical models that would support today's developing countries’ reliance on mining operations for further economic development.[16] These countries’ dependence on mining creates tension due to the relatively small size of the developing countries and their exploitation of nonrenewable resources at the expense of their other natural resources.[17] This land tension typically leads to poor economic performance and political instability, which in turn creates the conflicts that make coltan an ethically charged commodity.[18]

Environmental concerns

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In addition to the human rights issues attached to the coltan industry, the mining process itself can be environmentally hazardous.[19][20] Since it is usually pan-mined, the mining process and slurry from this process can contaminate water and may be harmful to ecosystems,[20] although since no chemicals are added to process the minerals it is relatively benign. However, while the exact effects of prolonged coltan exposure through dust around particularly artisanal mines have not yet been studied in detail, more DNA damage was found in children living in mining areas than in those from control groups.[21] Preliminary results of an ongoing study also hint that babies born to miners suffer "an increased risk of birth defects."[21] Other risks include acidic drainage and the presence of toxic metals such as nickel and substances like arsenic and cyanide. Air pollution is also a concern.[22]

Some people question the sustainability of artisanal mining, but miners often are very poor and have few other options to earn a living. Illegal mining in national parks and land reserves can be especially damaging, such as the Kahuzi-Biéga National Park in the DRC and the Puinawai National Reserve in Colombia, due to the deep forest cover these places provide.[8] Coltan is mined using techniques developed for gold mining in the 1800s.[23] The work is difficult and dangerous, with workers panning for coltan in large craters in stream beds, with the average worker producing less than one kilogram of coltan a day.[citation needed]

Coltan mines operate under boom-bust economics and not only strip the mineral from the land, but also cause environmental degradation.[24] In mining towns that depend on coltan for their wealth, fewer people cultivate the land. Numerous instances of famine related to the mining operations contribute to increasingly unsustainable types for land use. Besides the harm it does to food security in the eastern Congo, coltan mining is inimical to land uses such as ecotourism, game ranches, and medical research which could possibly provide better incomes and profit from the wildlife and forest land. Mining threatens the national parks across the Congo.[25]

Developing nations often go through with mining operations because they need the capital these operations bring without thinking of the environmental impacts. Given that mining is an expensive venture to undertake, the returns are sometimes low. Civil societies who study developing nations, such as Oxfam, have stated that the cost of mining on the environment can cause nearly permanent environmental damage,[26] which can leave a developing nation permanently poorer, and that support for mining should only be offered in countries that have a clearly defined plan for using the revenue gained from mining for the promotion of public health and infrastructure investments that will eventually allow them to become less resource-dependent.[27]

The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the UN advocate for extractive activity to stop in UNESCO World Heritage sites and in proposed protected areas within conservation sites, in areas with last remaining examples of unique ecosystems, and in places where mining threatens the well-being of local communities and indigenous peoples.[28][29]

Criminal activity

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Smuggling

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Rwandan coltan comes mostly from mines in the DRC, usually in the conflict areas adjacent to the Rwandan border. Only four of the ten largest Rwandan mining companies have taken any measures to verify whether their product is conflict-sourced.[30] Rwanda has been implicated multiple times in smuggling Congolese coltan by UN investigators, as have Burundi and Uganda.[31] Uganda and Burundi however do not export coltan, so the UN has found it difficult to verify that the smuggling is still taking place. About half of exported Rwandan coltan comes from conflict regions in the DRC.[32]

Many countries export their raw coltan to China for further processing. The UN reports that many tons of coltan from the DRC are processed through China and are often mixed with samples from conflict-free regions to produce tainted coltan that is more difficult to source. This practice undermines the efforts made by countries with legislation restricting conflict materials, such as the United States and Canada.[citation needed]

Cartels

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In Colombia, the coltan mining industry is involved in numerous internal conflicts and is currently illegal. This has not stopped guerilla forces and militia groups from mining the ore and selling it on the black market or shipping it to China. The Colombian government has made little attempt to regulate the industry. In 2010, plans were announced to auction off the rights to mine coltan in certain areas, but those plans were never completed and were dropped by the current administration.[2] Most of the coltan activity takes place in the deep jungle areas along the Southeastern borders of Venezuela or Brazil, causing severe environmental repercussions. Colombia's coltan mines are often located in national parks and on indigenous territory, which forces the native population into the mining industry. Colombian coltan is tied to violence at every step of the process. The mines are typically owned by paramilitary groups or drug cartels such as the Sinaloa cartel and the Cifuentes Villa family, who use the same smugglers to move both drugs and coltan.[12] Colombian authorities have little control over the coltan mining region due to its size and density, and coltan is easily moved along the same routes as cocaine and emeralds, two of Colombia's most heavily trafficked illegal goods.[33]

In Venezuela, the government has sent military patrols into the jungle to root out illegal mining activities and the Colombian cartel leaders who fund these operations.[8] As in Colombia, indigenous Venezuelans in the Parguaza region have suffered from the mining industry, and people have suffered violence from the coltan mine's military supervisors.[8]

 
Parguaza range, green at top of image

Proposed solutions

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Ensuring clean coltan

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It is difficult for manufacturers to ensure that the coltan they use in their products is not from a conflict zone or otherwise unethically produced. Currently there is one process for verifying the origin of a coltan sample. This process, developed in Germany, involves creating an elemental ‘fingerprint’ via WD X-ray fluorescence analysis and X-ray diffraction analysis to determine the composition and amounts of trace elements present in the sample.[34] These results are then compared to the results of samples of known provenance, much like the Kimberly process for diamonds. This technique works for samples of mixed sources as well as pure coltan; however, it requires having sample fingerprints for all original coltan sources on file. Using this technique, it is possible to identify the source of most coltan samples. As of 2010, almost 75% of the world's coltan mines have samples on file.[30] However, the process is expensive and lengthy and while it has worked in Rwanda, adapting these fingerprinting techniques to the DRC mining industry and convincing countries such as China to adopt these methods has been difficult.[30] Both the United States and Canada have passed legislation that provides incentives for using certified coltan and making conflict materials extralegal, but because most coltan is processed in China and China does not use the certification processes, avoiding conflict coltan has been very difficult.[citation needed] Roughly 60% of the coltan mines in Africa, including in the DRC, have some percentage of Canadian backing but are not subject to Canada's laws about environmental hazards and human rights violations.[35] Both Canada and the United States have passed acts that attempt to curtail the purchase of conflict-sourced materials.[36]

Most of this change has been consumer-driven. Back in 2004, the TIC (Tantalum-Niobium International Study Center) had little interest in regulating conflict materials, but since then has become one of the leading voices promoting conflict-free minerals. Awareness campaigns in Western countries have pushed manufacturers such as Apple and Intel to rely on more than just the word of their suppliers that the coltan used in their products is conflict-free.[37] This consumer interest pushed the TIC to create a working group in 2009 to promote better standards for coltan mining and over the next decade it successfully removed conflict minerals from the coltan supply chain. The group works with the OECD, European Commission, civil society, the International Tin Association, UN and with other NGOs to monitor risks associated with conflict affected and high risk (CAHRA) areas and to promote transparency in the supply chain.[38] The TIC has created a process to deliver conflict-free coltan from Africa to refinery sites, called ITSCI, by using independent third-party companies to assess the mining sites and determine whether or not they violate of human rights and through working with RMI to audit them smelters and refiners that purchase material.[39]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Human Rights". web.mit.edu. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  2. ^ a b Molinski 2012
  3. ^ Melcher et al. 2008, p.1
  4. ^ "5 Top Tantalum-mining Countries". Investing News Network. 2018-11-22. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  5. ^ "Tantalum" (PDF). minerals.usgs.gov. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  6. ^ USGS 2012, p. 163
  7. ^ "BGR - Conflict Minerals". www.bgr.bund.de. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  8. ^ a b c d Diaz-Struck and Poliszuk 2012
  9. ^ "DR of Congo: UN panel on plunder of resources publishes final report". UN News. 2003-10-28. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  10. ^ Rauxloh 2007, p. 305
  11. ^ UN 1948
  12. ^ a b Gómez 2012
  13. ^ Opijnen, Marjon van; and Joris Oldenziel (2011). "2010: Responsible Supply Chain Management, Potential success factors and challenges for addressing prevailing human rights and other CSR issues in supply chains of EU-based companies".
  14. ^ Nest 2001, p. 41
  15. ^ a b Kelly, Annie (2016-01-19). "Children as young as seven mining cobalt used in smartphones, says Amnesty". The Guardian. Guardian News & Media. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  16. ^ Power 2002, p. 28
  17. ^ Willis and Murray 2011, p. 1
  18. ^ Willis and Murray 2011, p. 2
  19. ^ "The hidden costs of cobalt mining". The Washington Post. 28 February 2018.
  20. ^ a b "Backgrounder: Mining and the Environment". www.cobaltmininglegacy.ca. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  21. ^ a b "Scientists at KU Leuven and University of Lubumbashi reveal the hidden costs of cobalt mining in DR Congo". nieuws.kuleuven.be. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  22. ^ "Environmental Concern: Air Pollution". www.cobaltmininglegacy.ca. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  23. ^ UN 2001
  24. ^ Goldblatt, Jenna (May 2024). "Conflict and Dependence in Mineral Mining: The Case of Venezuela". Diamond Open Access Journals At Cambridge, University Of Cambridge. doi:10.60866/CAM.17. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  25. ^ Montague, D. (2002). Stolen goods: coltan and conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo. SAIS Review, 22(1), 103-118.
  26. ^ Power 2002, p. 33
  27. ^ Power 2002, p. 34
  28. ^ "Almost a third of all natural World Heritage Sites under threat of oil, gas and mining exploration | WWF". wwf.panda.org. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  29. ^ "World Heritage and Extractive Industries". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  30. ^ a b c Lublinski et al. 2010
  31. ^ UN 2004
  32. ^ Nest 2011, p. 26
  33. ^ Nest 2011, p. 68
  34. ^ Melcher, et al. 2008, p. 8
  35. ^ Missakabo 2008
  36. ^ Marlow and El Akkad 2010b, p. 1
  37. ^ Marlow and El Akkad 2010a, p. 3
  38. ^ TIC 2012
  39. ^ TIC 2011, p. 8

Further reading

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  • Diaz-Struck, Emilia and Joseph Poliszuk (2012) Venezuela emerges as new source of ‘conflict minerals.’ iWatch News (the Center for Public Integrity) 4 March 2012. Available http://www.iwatchnews.org/2012/03/04/8288/venezuela-emerges-new-source-conflict-minerals. Accessed 3 April 2012.
  • Essick, Kristy (2001) Guns, money, and cell phones. The Industry Standard Magazine, 11 June 2001. Available http://www.globalissues.org/article/442/guns-money-and-cell-phones. Accessed 10 May 2012.
  • Gómez, Ignacio (2012) Colombia's black-market coltan tied to drug traffickers, paramilitaries. iWatch News (the Center for Public Integrity) 4 March 2012. Available http://www.iwatchnews.org/node/8284. Accessed 4 April 2012.
  • Lublinski, Jan, Monika Griebeler, and Cyrus Farviar (2010) Coltan mines to be ‘fingerprinted’, German scientists say. Deutsche Welle, 13 August 2010. Available http://www.dw.de/dw/article/0,,5907446,00.html. Accessed 5 April 2012.
  • Marlow, Iain and Omar El Akkad (2010a) Smartphones: blood stains at our fingertips. Toronto: The Globe and Mail, 3 December 2010. Available https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/technology/smartphones-blood-stains-at-our-fingertips/article1825207/. Accessed 4 April 2012.
  • Marlow, Iain and Omar El Akkad (2010b) Momentum building to tackle coltan mining. Toronto: The Globe and Mail, 6 December 2010. Available https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/technology/momentum-building-to-tackle-coltan-mining/article1827419/. Accessed 4 April 2012.
  • Melcher, Frank, Maria Sitnikova, Torsten Graupner, Nicola Martin, Thomas Oberthür, Friedhelm Henjes-Kunst, Eike Gäbler, Axel Gerdes, Helene Brätz, Don Davis, and Stijn Dewaele (2008) Fingerprinting of conflict minerals: columbite-tantalite (“coltan”) ores. SGA (Society for Geology Applied to Mineral Deposits) News 23: 1, 7–13.
  • Missakabo, Mikhael (2008) Footprints and paradoxes of Canadian mining in the DRC. Pambazuka News: Pan-African Voices for Freedom and Justice 407.
  • Molinski, Dan (2012) Colombia to wage battle against illegal coltan mining. New York: The Wall Street Journal, 12 March 2012. Available https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702304537904577277902985836034. Accessed 9 May 2012.
  • Nest, Michael (2011) Coltan. Polity Press: Cambridge, UK.
  • Power, Michael (2002) Digging to development?: a historical look at mining and economic development. Report. Oxfam America: Boston, MA.
  • Rauxloh, Regina (2007) A call for the end of impunity for multinational corporations. Texas Wesleyan Law Review 14:297-315.
  • Tantalum-Niobium International Study Center (TIC) (2011) Update on conflict free supply chain management issues. TIC Bulletin 148: 5–9.
  • Tantalum-Niobium International Study Center (TIC) (2012) Working group. Online document. Available http://tanb.org/wg. Accessed 10 May 2012.
  • United Nations (1948) Universal declaration of human rights. Available http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/3ae6b3712c.html. Accessed 11 May 2012.
  • United Nations (2001) Security council condemns illegal exploitation of Democratic Republic of Congo's natural resources. Press release. UN. 3 May 2001. Available http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2001/sc7057.doc.htm. Accessed 9 May 2012.
  • United Nations (2004) Coltan. Online document. Available https://web.archive.org/web/20140823180052/http://www.un.int/drcongo/war/coltan.htm. Accessed 7 May 2012.
  • United States Geographic Survey (2012) Tantalum. Mineral commodity summaries. Report. pp. 162–163.
  • Wickens, Judy (2004) Developments in the tantalum market. Presentation presented at the Minor Metals Conference, October 2004.
  • Willis, Richard and Warwick Murray (2011) Breaking the resource curse: the cases of New Zealand and Australia. Australian Studies 2: 1–17.
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