Latest update May 23rd, 2026 5:48 AM
Jul 12, 2021 News
Kaieteur News- On July 1, a project titled “Strengthening the enabling framework for biodiversity mainstreaming and mercury reduction in small-scale gold mining operations” was launched at the Boardroom of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
The US$4,500,000 (GYD 936,000,000) project funded by the Global Environment Facility (GEF) will be implemented over the course of seven years across two mining districts within Guyana, specifically in the communities of Mahdia/Konawaruk area, Region Eight and Puruni, Region Seven.
The objective of the project is to strengthen the regulatory framework and institutional capacity for the management of small-scale gold mining and to promote greater adoption of environmentally responsible mining techniques in Guyana in order to protect globally significant biodiversity, reduce mercury contamination, enhance local livelihoods and human health. The project also seeks to improve the environmental management of small-scale gold mining in Guyana, which is the largest driver of deforestation and degradation in the country and contributes to biodiversity loss, land degradation and contamination.
During his opening remarks, UNDP-Guyana Resident Representative, Jairo Valvedre Bermudez noted that, “the project supports the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals and related instruments, those being the Convention on Biological Diversity and the Minamata Convention, and takes cognizance of Guyana’s Low Carbon Development Strategy.” He also noted that the mining sector has been of great concern due to the use of mercury and its impacts on the environment, emphasizing the project’s importance to sustainable livelihoods and human health.
Also delivering remarks, was Ms. Sharifah Razack, Deputy Executive Director of the EPA, who noted that despite major contributions to the economy, gold mining has been identified as a major driver of deforestation, forest degradation, and associated biodiversity loss.
Four outcomes are intended to be derived from the project: Policy and regulatory framework strengthened and supported for oversight of the environmental impacts of the small-scale gold mining sector; Increased institutional capacity and inter-institutional coordination to mitigate and manage the impacts of small-scale gold mining; Adoption of more environmentally responsible gold mining practices increased; and Knowledge management, monitoring and evaluation implemented to support learning and upscaling.
From the implementation of the project objectives, the expected global impacts that expected going to be achieved include:
a) 6,500,000 hectares of forests of the greenstone belt in six mining districts of Guyana under improved management to protect globally significant biodiversity through support to the implementation of the National Mineral Sector Policy Framework and Actions which seek to balance mineral development with other priorities such as biodiversity conservation, protection of watersheds and freshwater, preservation of carbon stocks and socioeconomic development;
b) Phase-out of 10.2 metric tonnes of mercury in project intervention areas;
c) 1,235 miners (10% are women) implementing environmentally responsible mining practices reducing mercury use, deforestation and safety and occupational threats, and increasing gold recovery and incomes;
d) 1,209 hectares of high conservation value forests conserved in project intervention areas through improved prospecting;
e) 445 hectares of forests and forest land restored in areas degraded by mining in demonstration project sites;
f) 8,032 persons benefitted through awareness raising, training and reduced exposure to mercury: 1,499 miners (10% women), 2,178 Mahdia residents (42% women); 4,355 indigenous peoples (50% women).
These benefits, Kaieteur News understands, will translate into direct benefits for various species, many of which are globally significant, including endemic and endangered species as well as species of economic importance to local communities and Indigenous peoples.
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