Friday , 29 March 2024
Environment Secretary Regina Paz Lopez. (Photo: PCOO)

Lopez throws roadblocks to mine closures review

Environment Secretary Regina Lopez is blocking a plea of the Department of Finance (DoF)-led Mining Industry Coordinating Council (MICC) for the government to allocate P50 million to review the mine closures ordered by the Department of Environment and Nat­ural Resources (DENR).

Finance Assistant Secretary Paola Alvarez said the budget support is needed to hire independent experts to reassess the operations—not just of the 28 mines shuttered or suspended earlier by the Department of Environ­ment and Natural Resources (DENR) but of all 311 mining contracts in the country—in keeping with the directive of President Duterte himself for a com­prehensive review on the mine closures during a Cabinet meeting last February.

Acting on that presidential order for a reassessment of the 2016 au­dit done by the DENR that led to the closure or suspension of the 28 mines, Alvarez pointed out that “the Council subsequently held two meeting that resulted in the unanimous adoption of MICC Resolution 6 providing for a multistakeholder review of all mining operations, and an agreement to seek a P50-million allocation from the De­partment of Budget and Management (DBM) to fund this activity over a three-month period.”

“In fact, DENR Secretary Regina Lopez was present at the first MICC meeting held on Feb. 9, in which she signed with her Council co-chairper­son, Finance Secretary Carlos Domin­guez III, this MICC resolution that her personal lawyer, Christian Monsod, had helped draft in that same gathering,” said Alvarez.

“Hence, we at the DOF are rather perplexed as to why the good secretary would seemingly want to throw a mon­key wrench into the MICC-approved review of all mining operations by op­posing the budgetary support when, first, such a reassessment was ordered by President Duterte no less during the Cabinet meeting last Feb. 7, and, sec­ond, she herself formally approved such an MICC review by signing MICC Resolution No. 6 during the Council’s meeting on Feb. 9,” Alvarez said.

With regard to the P50-million budgetary support, Alvarez recalled that “Lopez had likewise green-lighted this request to the DBM during the follow-up MICC meeting last February 20, as the Council would need to hire a sufficient number of private experts from different fields to review the technical, legal, social, environ­mental and economic aspects of all 311 mining contracts in the country,” she said.

As for the DENR boss’ plan to appeal to DOF Under­secretary Bayani Agabin to in­hibit from the MICC process in light of his past ties to mining companies, Alvarez said “Secre­tary Lopez is free to make such an appeal, in the same manner that certain groups are free to oppose her confirmation by the Commission on Appointments on a conflict-of-interest issue and other grounds.”

However, she added that Agabin had already pointed out that his professional engage­ment with the Philippine As­sociated Smelting & Refining Corp. (PASAR) ended 15 years ago and with Rapu Rapu Min­erals Inc., 10 years ago.

“Perhaps, it is the DENR secretary who needs to recuse herself from the MICC process, given that she has publicly stat­ed that she would stick to the findings of the DENR’s audit report regardless of the out­come of the MICC review or­dered by the President,” Alvarez said.

She said the recruitment of the experts who will conduct the review is a multi-agency process of which the DOF is a part of, as so mandated by Executive Order No. 79 that then-President Aquino issued in 2012 creating the MICC.

“The DOF cannot be ex­cluded from this process, as it does not of itself face any con­flict of interest, without violat­ing its mandate under EO 79,” she said.

Alvarez recalled that the MICC is mandated under EO 79 to review all mining-relat­ed rules and regulations, is­suances and agreements, and was ordered convened by the President in the Feb. 7 Cabinet meeting to discuss and reassess the DENR’s audit last year.

In the Feb. 7 Cabinet meet­ing, President Duterte directed the DOF and DENR to con­vene the MICC on Feb. 9 and to invite the Solicitor General, Chief Presidential Legal Coun­sel and the Justice Secretary to the meeting, so that they could comprehensively discuss the results of the DENR audit and Secretary Lopez’s recommen­dation to close down 23 mines and suspend the operations of five others.

She said that DENR Un­dersecretary for legal affairs Maria Paz Luna, who had at­tended the subsequent MICC and its Technical Working Group (TWG) meetings on Secretary Lopez’s behalf, even volunteered to make available for MICC review the DENR audit report last year that served as basis for the 28 closure and suspension orders.

Earlier, Agabin said that in response to President Duter­te’s directive during the Feb. 7 Cabinet meeting, “the MICC determined that there was a need to conduct a compre­hensive review of the mining operations given the technical nature of the DENR audit and the number of mines involved in the closure and suspension orders.”

He said the framework, process and methodology of undertaking the review was approved by the MICC’s TWG in a Feb. 20 meeting, in which “Secretary Lopez’s represen­tative, DENR Undersecretary Luna, provided several inputs and agreed to the conduct of the review and its framework.”

“In fact, it was Undersec­retary Luna who volunteered to make the audit report done by the DENR on the 28 min­ing operations available to the multi-stakeholder technical review teams, and joined the other members of the TWG in adopting the framework for the review,” Agabin said.

In the March 3 meeting of the MICC, Agabin said the framework for the review was presented to the entire MICC body, and “again Undersecre­tary Luna was present and even gave further inputs.”

“After discussions during the March 3 meeting, the framework was unanimously agreed upon and adopted by the MICC,” he said.

Agabin noted that during the MICC and TWG meetings, it was learned that the DENR audit was not a multi-stake­holder review as required under EO 79 as it was done by only four personnel from the DENR and a third party expert.

Also, none of the 20 de­partments and agencies repre­sented in the MICC was con­sulted by the DENR, Agabin said.

“Even Isabela Vice Gov. Antonio Albano, represent­ing the ULAP (Union of Lo­cal Authorities of the Philip­pines), disclosed during the last MICC meeting on March 3 that the LGUs (local gov­ernment units) of the areas hosting the affected mines were never consulted by the DENR,” said Agabin.

He said the audit team created under DENR Memo­randum Order No. 2016-01 is not a multi-stakeholder team as required by EO 79.

“Section 3 of that DENR memo states that its audit team was composed only of a third party expert and one officer each from the DENR Central Office, its Regional Office, Mines and Geoscienc­es Bureau and Environmental Management Bureau,” Agabin said.

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