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Mining industry of the Democratic Republic of the Congo

The mining industry of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (French: Industrie minière de la République Démocratique du Congo) produces copper, diamonds, tantalum, tin, gold, and more than 63% of global cobalt production.[1] Minerals and petroleum are central to the DRC's economy, making up more than 95% of the value of its exports.[2]

A sample from the Kolwezi area with green colored Malachite containing copper and darker Heterogenite containing cobalt.

Regulation and organization edit

Mining law in the DRC is given by the mining code, which was passed into law by the Joseph Kabila administration in 2018. This replaced the previous code passed by Kabila in 2002 near the end of the Second Congo War. The revised code was opposed by many multinational mining companies, since it introduced new taxes and removed a stability clause protecting existing investments from changes to regulations.[3][4][5]

Industrial mines edit

 
A large industrial copper mine in Kolwezi.

Most large industrial mines are run by joint ventures between a foreign company and one of the DRC's state-owned (parastatal) mining companies. Large scale exploration permits (permis de recherches, PR) and exploitation permits (permis d’exploitation, PE) are officially granted by the DRC Mining Register (cadastre minier, CAMI). Such ventures typically require years of planning, and involve millions of dollars of investment. The largest financiers are the Congolese firm Rawbank, which as of 2022 had leant out $820 million to mining companies, and the Kenyan firm Equity Group Holdings.[6]

Semi-industrial and artisanal mines edit

 
Artisanal miners mining wolframite and cassiterite in Kailo Territory.

Much mining has been done in small artisanal mining operations, sometimes known as Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining (ASM).[7] These small-scale mines were unregulated,[8] with high levels of child labor and workplace injury. Officially, artisanal mining is authorized in specially designated Artisanal Exploitation Zones (AEZ). However, in practice, these zones are comparatively small, and most artisanal mining takes place elsewhere, where it is common for artisanal miners to trespass onto industrial sites to work. Artisanal miners at a particular site are often organized into a cooperative.

Most artisanal mining is carried out with simple hand tools. Semi-industrial mining refers to operations which make use of some degree of mechanization, but with less investment than industrial operations run by large companies.

Supply chain regulation edit

Today, larger mining companies and non-for-profit organisations are addressing these complex issues and are continuously adopting international guidance and initiatives that helps set up regulations on a community to community basis with government support and involvement. A number of initiatives are the ESG ( Environmental, Social and Governance) and IRMA (Initiative for Responsible Mining Assurance). One such globally recognised certification is the 3T iTSCi,[9] the only widely implemented and accepted mineral traceability and due diligence system in the region for the 3T minerals – Tin, Tantalum and Tungsten, an internationally recognised certification for responsible mining and traceability under the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act. Today four central African countries including the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) provides legitimate and ethical 3T minerals. ITSCI is the only industry initiative with standards 100% aligned with the OECD Guidance [9] Much has been done in the last 15 years, providing artisanal and small-scale miners a support network through iTSCi, to build the foundations and regulate the industry, it also offers safety to the community participants and miners, education and training, safe practices, human rights, protection to the environment for sustainable practices and manage the social aspect.

At the end of 2019 ITSCI has seen to 2000 mines, employment of around 80,000 miners, and the supply of over 2000 tonnes of tin, tantalum and tungsten minerals per month.[9] A report had been done by Pact in 2015, detailing iTSCi's progress over the previous five years, it discusses the successes, the challenges ahead and the work yet to be done.[10] Mining can occur within protected areas, and around endangered or threatened species. As of 2008 many ASM operations existed for minerals such as coltan.[citation needed] ASM operations employ a significant portion of the DRC's population; estimates range up to one fifth of the population, or 12.5 million people.[8] Problems stemming from artisanal mining include disruption of families, mining-related illnesses, environmental damage, child labor, prostitution and rape.[11][12]

There is a push globally by the EU and major car manufacturers for global production of cobalt, tin, tantalum, tungsten and lithium to be sourced and produced sustainably, the materials needed for the new technologies that are being deployed as the globe transforms into new energy systems. Companies are adopting and practising ESG initiatives in line with OECD Guidance and putting in place evidence of zero to low carbon footprint activities in the supply chain production of lithium-ion batteries. A 2010 US law required American companies to disclose the source for conflict minerals: tin, tantalum, tungsten and gold. Amnesty International are now advocating for cobalt to be added to this list, to ensure transparency amongst tech giants and traceability of the supply chain. These initiatives are already taking place with major mining companies, Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining companies (ASM). Car manufacturers and battery manufacturer supply chains Tesla, VW, BMW, BASF, Glencore are participating in several initiatives, such as the Responsible Cobalt Initiative and Cobalt for Development study. In 2018 BMW Group in partnership with BASF, Samsung SDI and Samsung Electronics have launched a pilot project in the DRC over one pilot mine, to improve conditions and address challenges for artisanal miners and the surrounding communities. BMW's involvement in these projects suggests they may need to source additional supply of cobalt from DRC mines in future, having a long-term strategic approach to sustainability in this region.

In the US, the 2010 Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act has required retailers and manufacturers to track and publish the amount of conflict minerals sourced from the DRC. In August 2012, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued the final regulations.[13]: 56274–56275  However, the regulation requiring manufacturers to publicly disclose the use of conflict materials was challenged by the National Association of Manufacturers as a First Amendment violation, and overturned in 2014. The DC Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the decision in 2015.[14]

By product edit

Copper and cobalt edit

In the DRC, copper and cobalt resources are mined in the south of the country in the Copperbelt, in the Lualaba and Haut-Katanga Provinces. Most cobalt in the DRC is found in these copper mines. The south of the DRC is more politically stable than the eastern DRC, so copper and cobalt mining generally has comparatively fewer conflict resource concerns compared to the 3TG minerals mined in the eastern DRC.

The majority of copper-cobalt mining is carried out on an industrial scale by various joint ventures between a foreign company and the Congolese state owned Gécamines as a minority partner. Glencore’s decision to mothball its Mutanda mine in August 2019 in the Congo citing cobalt and copper operation is uneconomic due to falling commodities prices and an increase in a government royalty tax during the years of Kabila influence. Mutanda — the world's largest cobalt mine — was pegged to transition to care and maintenance (temporary closure) by year-end 2019, the world's largest and responsible for 20% global output.

Artisanal mining of copper and cobalt, usually by hand, is also widespread. In December 2019, the DRC government announced the Enterprise Generale du Cobalt (EGC), the state-owned miner Gecamines would become the state-controlled buyer of cobalt, to purchase and market all cobalt from small-scale artisanal miners (accounting for 15 to 30% of cobalt production), that is not mined industrially. This in effect will centralise the trade, help better regulate the industry in the DRC by fighting mining fraud and maximise state revenues.[15] However, as of May 2022, the company had not yet begun purchasing any cobalt, and the Congolese minister of mines was considering canceling the company's cobalt buying monopoly.[16] In the United States, Tesla, alongside Google, Apple and others, were sued by a human rights group in December 2019 for artisanal cobalt mined under unsafe and unethical conditions, including the use of child labour in the sourcing of cobalt in their supply chains.[17] The lawsuit was later dismissed.[18]

Diamonds edit

 
Rough diamonds from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Their yellow color is due to the presence of impurities which absorb blue light.

Diamond mining in the DRC is done mostly by artisanal miners, and almost exclusively by hand.[19] Artisanal diamond mining employs an estimated 1 million people in the DRC.[20] Despite being one of the world's largest diamond produces by volume, fewer diamonds from DRC are of gemstone quality compared to other countries, and more diamonds are of the less expensive industrial-grade variety.[21]

Diamond mining centers include Tshikapa, capital of Kasaï Province. In 2022, a mining collapse in the Tshikpa area killed several dozen artisanal miners. An industrial diamond miner in the DRC, the state company Societé Minière de Bakwanga (MIBA), also has long operated diamond mines near Mbuji-Mayi in Kasaï-Oriental province. In 1990, one of the largest colorless diamonds in the world, the Millennium Star, was found in the Mbuji-Mayi area. In 2013, the assets and debt of the state controlled Societe Congolaise d’Investissement Minier Sprl (SCIM) were given to a new 50/50 joint venture between the Congolese government and the Anhui Foreign Economic Construction Group, Societe Anhui-Congo d'Investissement Minier Sprl (SACIM). According to the deal, Anhui promised to spend $100 million on various infrastructure projects.[22] By 2017, SACIM produced 85% of the industrially mined diamonds in the DRC.[23] MIBA's and SACIM's mining permits are directly adjacent to each other.[24]

Gold edit

The Twangiza-Namoya gold belt in the eastern DRC contains large gold deposits, as well as the Kilo-Moto greenstone belt in northeast corner of the DRC. Mines include the large industrial Kibali Gold Mine, as well as many small artisanal mines.

Gold from the DRC is often a conflict mineral, and is often used to fund rebel groups in the DRC by smuggling gold over the border into nearby countries such as Uganda.[25] In August 2021, South Kivu governor Theo Kasi banned six small Chinese mining companies operating in the province for failing to register their businesses, a move subsequently endorsed by the Chinese Ministry of foreign affairs.[26] In March 2022, the United States Department of the Treasury sanctioned African Gold Refinery Ltd., a large gold refinery based in Uganda owned by Belgian businessman Alain Goetz, blaming the company for accepting hundreds of millions of dollars worth of gold from the DRC without questioning its origin.[27][28] In December 2022, Goetz was also sanctioned by the European Union.[29]

Lithium edit

The DRC has globally significant lithium reserves. As of 2022, there are no active lithium mines in the DRC, but several projects are in development.[30] Lithium deposits include Manono-Kitolo mine, which formerly produced tin and coltan until it was closed in 1982.[31]

Tantalum, Tin, and Tungsten edit

The so-called 3T minerals, standing for tantalum, tin, and tungsten, are mostly mined in relatively small scale artisanal mines in the eastern DRC.

Coltan is mined in the DRC, mostly in the eastern part of the country in places like the Rubaya mines. Coltan consists of mixtures of the minerals columbite and tantalite in varying proportions, which can be refined into niobium and tantalum, respectively. Cassiterite is a mineral containing tin. It is mined in mines such as Bisie. Tungsten is also mined in the DRC.

The 3T minerals have been described as conflict minerals, due to their connections to funding violence such as the ongoing Kivu conflict. Several initiatives exist to source conflict-free extraction, with mixed reception as to their effectiveness.

Others edit

Industrial mining of other minerals has also occurred in the DRC. In contrast to copper-cobalt, which is central to the DRC economy, these other resources are more peripheral, and many of the mines are not necessarily active.

Coal was mined at near the town of Luena (Haut-Lomami) [fr] in the modern Haut-Lomami province by Société des Charbonnages de la Luena starting in 1922. Peak production occurred in 1955 at 429,000 tons, which by 1974 had slowly declined to 103,000 tons.[32] After discovering the deposit in 1911 and having its opening delayed by the first world war, Géomines operated an underground coal mine west of Kalemie along the Lukuga River from 1923 until 1931.[33][34]

There are significant manganese deposits from Kisenge-Kamata-Kapolo, in Lualaba Province, totaling about 12 Mt of ore.[35][36] Manganese is also found at Kasekelesa and Mwene-Ditu.[37] Mining at the Kisenge was begun in 1951 by the Forrest Group. In March 2018, 1000 tons of manganese ore from the mine made up the first train of the reopened Benguela Railway following decades of closure due to the Angolan civil war. The shipment was from the DRC parastatal Entreprise Minière de Kisenge Manganèse (EMKM).[38]

The DRC has some uranium deposits, most notably the Shinkolobwe deposit, which has among the highest Uranium grades in the world. Historically, uranium from the Shinkolobwe mine was used in several nuclear weapons programs, including serving as the majority of the raw material for the United States' Manhattan Project. Officially, the mine is closed, but illicit artisanal uranium mining has continued, though who is buying the uranium is not publicly known.[39]

Beginning as a large open pit copper mine in 1924, the Kipushi Mine eventually became an underground producer of zinc, germanium, and silver. Closed since 1993, the owners of the mine plan to restart production in the 2020s.[40]

History edit

Pre-colonial mining (c. 14th century) edit

Mining in the DRC was carried out for centuries before colonial powers arrived. For example, the Katanga Cross, made from sand cast copper, existed from at least the 14th century, and evolved in use first as a symbol of wealth, and later a form of currency.[41] At the time of the Berlin conference that precipitated the Scramble for Africa, the copper mining region of the DRC was controlled by the Yeke Kingdom headed by Msiri. The kingdom had an already well-established trade network in resources, with copper from the Katanga region making up an important part.[42]

Congo Free State and Belgian Congo (1885–1960) edit

 
Belgian Congo Katanga copper mine

Several mining companies were established under Belgian rule, such as Union Minière du Haut-Katanga in 1906, Forminière in 1913, and Société minière du Bécéka in 1919. Mines active in this period included the Kipushi Mine. For example, the Belgian colonial administrator Georges Moulaert was active in setting up several mining companies, but was publicly criticized for heavy use of forced labour in his gold mining operations.

DRC and Zaire (1960–1997) edit

During the Congo crisis, Belgian companies were significant supporters of the failed attempts by the State of Katanga and South Kasai to establish their own states independent of the DRC. Following the end of the crisis, most of the mining assets of Belgian-owned companies were nationalized as Congolese state-owned companies, usually known as parastatal companies.

Mining companies in the DRC
Belgian mining company DRC mining company Main production
Union Minière du Haut-Katanga (UMHK) La Générale des Carrières et des Mines (Gécamines)
Société de développement industriel et minier du Congo (Sodimico)
Copper-cobalt mining
Société internationale forestière et minière du Congo (Forminière) ? Diamond mining
Société minière du Bécéka (Mibeka) Societé Minière de Bakwanga (Miba) Diamond mining
Compagnie Minière des Grands-Lacs (MGL)
Syndicat Miniere de l'Etain (Symetain)
Société Minière et Industrielle du Kivu (Sominki) 3TG mining
Compagnie Géologique et Minière des Ingénieurs et Industriels belges (Géomines) Société Géologique et Minière du Congo (Gemico) 3TG mining
Société des Mines d’Or de Kilo-Moto [de] (Sokimo) Société Minière de Kilo-Moto (Sokimo) Gold mining

Mass scale looting (1998) edit

During the Second Congo War mass-scale looting of mineral assets by all combatant forces—Congolese, Rwandan, Ugandan and foreign civilians—took place. The small artisanal mining operations the fighters were robbing sometimes shut down afterwards and larger foreign businesses reduced operations as well.

After Rwanda, Uganda, and Burundi's successful 1998 invasion of eastern and southeastern DRC in the Second Congo War (1998-2003), "mass scale looting" took root, according to the United Nations.[43]: 8  While initial invasion tactics were still being worked out, military commanders were already making business deals with foreign companies for the Congo's vast mineral reserves.[43] Between September 1998 and August 1999 stockpiles of minerals, agricultural products, timber, and livestock were illegally confiscated from Congolese businesses, piled onto trucks, and sold as exports from the confiscating countries.[44] Rwandan and Ugandan troops forced local businesses to shut their doors by robbing and harassing civilian owners. Cars were stolen to such an extent that Uganda showed a 25% increase in automobile ownership in 1999.[44] DARA-Forest Company illegally logged then sold Congolese timber on the international market as its own export.[45][46] An American Mineral Fields executive allowed rebels to use his private Learjet in return for a $1 billion mining deal.[47] Global Witness in 2004 described the mining corporations' rush to acquire coltan-rich land in the rebel territory of the DRC as a continuation of the pattern of exploitation in play since the 1885 Conference of Berlin.[47][48]

Mining resumes (2001–present) edit

Following the peace accord in 2003, the focus returned to mining. Rebel groups supplied international corporations through unregulated mining by soldiers, locals organized by military commanders and by foreign nationals. The political framework was unstable.

The mass looting died down as stocks of minerals were depleted, and soldiers were encouraged by their commanders to take part in small-scale looting, which started an "active extraction phase".[43]: 8  Natural resources that were not stolen were often purchased with counterfeit Congolese francs, which contributed to inflation. Air transportation companies that once operated in the Congo disappeared and were replaced by companies affiliated with foreign armies. The Congolese government lost tax revenue from natural resources entering or leaving its air fields; air services were controlled by Rwandan and Ugandan troops, who routinely exported coltan from the Congo. The increase in air transportation networks also increased exploitation because of the new transport routes.[43][page needed] Coltan is the most profitable mineral export from the Congo, but it is particularly difficult to track because it is often listed as cassiterite, for which export taxes are lower. Coltan had been illegally extracted and sold via Burundi since 1995, three years before the invasion began.[43][page needed] The International Monetary Fund (IMF) stated that Burundi has no "gold, diamonds, columbotantalite, copper, cobalt or basic metals" mining operations, but has nonetheless been exporting them since 1998.[43]: 22  Likewise, Rwanda and Uganda had no known production sites for many of the minerals they exported at vastly increased rates after they invaded the DRC.[43][page needed] "Free zone areas" make diamonds difficult to track because they can be repackaged and "legally" sold as diamonds from that country.[43]: 17  The DRC exported few minerals after the invasion because its rural infrastructure was destroyed; mining and agricultural outputs waned.[43][page needed] yet the air transportation networks' new transport routes increased exploitation by the invaders.[43][page needed]

In 2000, Rwanda spent $70 million supporting about 25,000 troops and Uganda spent $110 million supporting twice as many troops.[43][page needed] Rwanda and Uganda financed their war efforts through commercial deals, profit-sharing with companies, and taxation, among other things. Rwandan soldiers stole coltan collected by villagers and sold it to diamond dealers. From the coltan trade alone, the Rwandan army may have collected $20 million per month, and coltan profits have been used to pay back loans from foreign creditors.[43]

Rebel groups MLC, RCD-Goma, and RCD-ML each made their own deals with foreign businessmen for cash and/or military equipment.[43] Battlefields most commonly centered on areas that held a lot of diamond and coltan potential and foreign armies' occupation of the eastern region was maintained by illegal resource exploitation.[43][page needed] For $1 million per month rebel group RCD-Goma gave a coltan monopoly to SOMIGL which they in turn poured into efforts to gain control from RCD-ML of mineral-loaded land.[43][page needed] To get fast cash to gain control of government land, the DRC gave a diamond monopoly to Dan Gertler's International Diamond Industries (IDI), which was supposed to pay the Congolese government $20 million for it. But it paid only $3 million, yet continued to extract diamonds from the region and sell them internationally.[43][page needed] Upon request of the IMF and World Bank the DRC liberalized diamond trade, after which IDI threatened to sue for breach of contract, a contract they themselves did not honor.[43][page needed]

Corporations and Western countries purchasing coltan from Rwanda, Uganda, or Burundi were aware of its origin; aid from western donors was funneled directly into Rwandan and Ugandan war efforts.[citation needed] The German government gave a loan to a German citizen to build his coltan export business in the DRC, for which he enlisted the help of RCD-Goma soldiers. Mineral plunder in the DRC was easy once the central authority had collapsed because of the extremely weak financial system, as well as the international corporations and governments that imported illegal minerals disregarding illegal conflicts on the part of proper standards.[43][page needed]

The US documented that many minerals were purchased from the DRC even though the DRC had no record of exporting them.[47] A lack of state stability combined with international corporations' and foreign governments’ interest in investing in Congolese minerals increased the pace at which the DRC was shaken from its fragile foundation. The UN identified the perpetrators of illegal resource exploitation in the DRC, but was unable to help prevent the economic exploitation of the country.[47]

IMF loan for debt relief (2009–2012) edit

 
View of Kamoto mine in 2006

In 2009 the DRC signed a loan contract with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for $12 billion of debt relief in 2010. The loan included trade conditions, such as liberalization of the diamond trade.[49][50] The same year, the IFC began working with the DRC on legal and regulatory improvements through an advisory service called "Conflict Affected States in Africa" (CASA). It suspended most activities during a dispute between IFC and the DRC over the expropriation of a mining investment.[51]: 14 

In September 2010, the Forces démocratiques de libération du Rwanda (FDLR), a group of mostly Hutu rebels, were reported to exploit timber, gold and coltan in North Kivu and South Kivu.[52] In September 2010, the government banned mining in the east of the country, to crack down on illegal organisations and corruption.[53] In 2011, the DRC was accused of "selling off billions of dollars of mining assets at knockdown prices".[citation needed] In 2012 the DRC began reviewing its 2002 mining code. It received warnings from the World Bank, was heavily lobbied by mining companies and investors who wanted to be included in the revision discussions, and did not complete the project.[54]

In 2012 the DRC failed to provide sufficient details on the process whereby state mining company Gécamines ceded mining assets to a company based in the British Virgin Islands, and the IMF called off a $530 million loan.[55] At the end of 2012 the IMF suspended the last loan payments, because of a lack of transparency in the DRC's process for awarding mining contracts.[50] The mining sector has since expanded, but commodity prices have declined and this has hampered the DRC's progress.

In July 2013, the IFC advisory service CASA re-engaged and helped the DRC adopt and implement the Organization for the Harmonization of Business Law in Africa (OHADA) Treaty.[51] Despite Congolese military operations to take Kinshasa mines from the Mai-Mai militia and the FDLR, the guerillas still controlled some of the mines and created disturbances. In 2014 Kabila told mining companies in Katanga province to postpone plans that would require more power due to an "energy crisis".[56] In March 2016, 42 NGOs urged Kabila to update the 2002 mining code after a draft was submitted to parliament in March, but Kabila decided to wait until metal markets recovered.[57]

Foreign involvement edit

In 2011, at least twenty-five international mining companies were active in the D.R. Congo according to Datamonitor 360.[citation needed] Canadian-domiciled mining companies had the highest presence, with nine in total: African Metals Corporation, Banro Corporation, DiamondCore, El Niño Ventures, First Quantum Minerals, ICS Copper Systems, Lundin Mining, and Anvil Mining, misidentified[according to whom?] as Australian, and Katanga Mining, misidentified[according to whom?] as British.[58]

Seven firms were incorporated in Australia: Austral Africa Resoiurces, BHP, AVZ Minerals, Green Machine Development Corporation, Lindian Resources, Mawson West, and Tiger Resources. Three were incorporated in South Africa: (African Rainbow Minerals, and AngloGold Ashanti, two in the United Kingdom: (Asa Resources Group and Randgold Resources), two from the United States: (Century Aluminum, Copper & Gold), and one each from China (CIC Mining Resources, with Japanese Eco Energy Group's African subsidiary, Eco Project Company), Morocco (Managem), and Switzerland (Xstrata).[58]

In 2008 and 2009, the Congolese operations of larger international companies, AngloGold Ashanti,[59] BHP Billiton,[60] and Xstrata[61] were all in the exploration and development phase, while Canada had four companies, Anvil Mining,[62] First Quantum Minerals,[63] Katanga Mining,[64] and Lundin Mining[65] involved in large-scale commercial extraction for several years or more.

Canada edit

In 2004 the Congolese military killed between seventy and one hundred civilians in the town of Kilwa, near Anvil Mining's Dikulushi mine, which resulted in legal proceedings against Anvil Mining in the DRC and Canada, investigations by the Australian Federal Police and by the World Bank Group's Office of the Compliance Advisor/Ombudsman.[citation needed]

In 2005, the World Bank's Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) funded the first DRC project by Canada and Ireland as co-investors, on behalf of the Dikulushi Mine held by Anvil Mining in Katanga Province.[66]

According to the Congolese government, in 2009 Canadian companies held US$4.5 billion in mining-related investments in the DR Congo.[67]

In 2009, First Quantum, active in the D.R.C since 1997,[68] had reported its corporate social responsibility contributions amounted to 3% of the Congolese gross national income.[69] It was the DRC's largest taxpayer that year, accounting for between one-eighth and one-quarter of collected revenue.[70] Since 2009, First Quantum Minerals[63][71] and Heritage Oil,[72] have had their mining permits revoked by the DRC government. First Quantum closed all its Congolese operations in 2010, and in concert with other stakeholders initiated international arbitration proceedings against the Congolese government.[73] The Congolese revocation was seen as a rebuke for the Government of Canada's alleged attempts to obstruct [74] the negotiation of International Monetary Fund and World Bank debt relief to the DRC in 2010.[75][76] In 2012, First Quantum's legal dispute with the DRC ended in an out-of-court settlement.[77]

At the end of the 2000s, the DRC ranked either first or second-largest[clarification needed] among African countries for Canadian mining.[78][full citation needed] The Government of Canada reported 28 Canadian mining and exploration companies operating in the D.R. Congo between 2001 and 2009, with four carrying out commercial-scale extraction; collectively, these companies' assets in the DRC ranged between Cdn.$161 million in 2003 and $5.2 billion in 2008.[78]

Canada's mining ministry, Natural Resources Canada, estimated the 2009 value of Canadian-owned mining assets in the D.R. Congo at Cdn.$3.3 billion, ten times more than in 2001, making the DRC the African country with second-highest African level of Canadian investment after Madagascar, and Canadian investment in the Congo representing a sixth of total Canadian mining assets in Africa.[78] In 2011, Natural Resources Canada valued Canadian mining assets in the DRC at Cdn.$2.6 billion .[79] The majority of Canadian-based mining companies currently[when?] or previously active in the DR Congo have been involved in either exploration and development or large-scale mining of the Congo's copper and cobalt resources. Based on World Bank estimates, three Canadian companies First Quantum Minerals, Lundin Mining in partnership with the US firm Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold and Katanga Mining were predicted in 2010 to create more than two-thirds of total Congolese copper output from 2008 to 2013, and for more than two-thirds of total Congolese cobalt output from 2008 to 2014.[70] These companies, and Canadian-incorporated Anvil Mining, were involved in industrial copper and cobalt extraction during 2000–2010.

As of early 2011, another eight junior Canadian mining companies including Ivanhoe Nickel & Platinum and Rubicon Minerals Corporation, reported holdings of copper and cobalt concessions in Katanga province. Nine Canadian junior mining companies, including Kinross Gold, previously held copper and/or cobalt concessions, but have since[when?] abandoned them, or sold them to other Canadian or South African firms.

In the diamond sector, Montreal-based Dan Gertler has been active since 1997.[80][81] Seven other Canadian junior companies reported owning properties in the DRC during 2001–2009, including Canaf Group through its 2008 acquisition of diamond mining company New Stone Mining,[82] and BRC DiamondCore.

Montreal-based Shamika Resources has been exploring for tantalum, niobium, tin and tungsten in the Eastern DRC[83] and Loncor Resources for gold, platinum, tantalum and other metals.[citation needed] Two Canadian-registered companies own petroleum concessions in the DRC: Heritage Oil, whose founder and former CEO is Tony Buckingham, and EnerGulf Resources.[citation needed][84]

Up until early 2011, four of the nine International Finance Corporation sponsored or proposed D.R.C projects were for Canadian-owned companies active in the DRC: to Kolwezi/Kingamyambo Musonoi Tailings SARL owned by Adastra Minerals ($50.0m., invested in 2006),[85] Africo Resources Ltd. (acquisition of Cdn.$8m. in Africo shares, invested in 2007),[86] and Kingamyambo Musonoi Tailings SARL as acquired by First Quantum, proposed in 2009 at a value of US$4.5 million in equity funding.[87][88]

In 2011, Canada's Fraser Institute annual survey of mining executives reported the DRC's ranking of its mining exploration investment favourability fell from eighth-poorest in 2006 down to second-poorest in 2010, among 45 African, Asian and Latin American countries and 24 jurisdictions in Canada, Australia and the United States, and this was attributed to "the uncertainty created by the nationalization and revision of contracts by the Kabila government".[89]

In 2012, Banro Corporation began gold production at its Twangiza Mine,[90] after owning gold concessions in the South Kivu and Maniema provinces, the Twangiza-Namoya gold belt, since 1996.[91] Six other Canadian companies have previously owned Congolese gold properties, including Barrick Gold (1996–1998),[92][93] and Moto Goldmines (2005–2009).

China edit

 
Belt and Road Initiative participant map

China and the DRC signed an MOU on the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) cooperation during a tour of China's Foreign Minister, Wang Yi, making the DRC, China's 45th Belt and Road Initiative partner in Africa.

Also known as the “New Silk Road,” the initiative consists of a network of railways, pipelines, highways and ports linking these networks of infrastructure to other Belt and Road Initiative partner countries in Russia, Europe, India, Central Asia and Southeast Asia. A positive move for the DRC and China relations when China decided to write off debts from the DRC and the new partnering for the Belt and Road Initiative, this will encourage further cooperation between the two countries and encourage investment from more Chinese miners, like China Molybdenum, to enter investments into the Congolese copper and cobalt industry.

Impacts of natural resource extraction on the DRC edit

Environmental impacts edit

Resource extraction has many impacts on the cultural and environmental diversity of the DRC; it is difficult to quantify the environmental degradation of the country, which is unstable and difficult for researchers to enter. It is also always difficult to quantify loss of biodiversity as animals are mobile and the lack of roads and navigable rivers hamper transportation into wilderness areas for researchers.[94][95]

Mining can be an intensive process and has affected some wilderness areas, including national parks and wildlife reserves such as Kahuzi-Biega and the Okapi Wildlife Reserve, both of which are World Heritage Sites. Mining in these areas is typically artisanal; a small-scale mining method that takes place in river beds and can, cumulatively, be very environmentally damaging. Artisanal mining degrades riparian zones, creating erosion and heavy silting of the water. The tailings are often dumped into the rivers and can be contaminated with mercury and cyanide, degrading the health of the river systems and putting people and wildlife at risk.[96][97]

Miners and refugees are relocating to parks in search of minerals; a reported 10,000 people have moved into Kahuzi-Biega and 4,000 to the Okapi Wildlife Reserve.[when?] This increases the pressures on wildlife as timber is cut down and used for cooking fuel, and wildlife is killed for bushmeat. Also, as people enter into these areas animals such as primates are collected for trade on the black market. Others are poached for their hides, or for their tusks, like elephants.[94][95]

The extent of logging has been difficult to quantify. Much of the logging that occurs is primarily for target hardwood species, rather than clear-cutting which can be assessed by satellite imaging.[94] Observations have shown an increased number of logging trucks moving across borders. Logging destroys valuable animal habitat and increases access into forested areas making it easier for poachers, miners to go there.[94]

Socio-cultural repercussions edit

Many factors contribute to the Democratic Republic of the Congo's severe socio-economic hardships, and not all resource extraction operations have had an entirely negative impact on Congolese society at large.

That said, the negative consequences of some forms of resource extraction, such as coltan mining, are devastating.[98] For example, as worldwide demand for consumer electronics has increased, so has the demand for tantalum, or coltan (DCA 2006) and reportedly, "much of the finance sustaining the civil wars in Africa, especially in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, is directly connected to coltan profits" (DCA 2006, pp 1). A United Nations report has echoed this assessment.

In the DRC, there are wars both between Congolese and conflicts with neighboring nations.[when?] Although these wars have components of intertribal conflict, in several cases the conflicts have been induced by external forces, such as changes in international support and foreign aid, and demand for resource extraction.[99] As a result of tantalum mining and wars, societies in the eastern regions of the Congo are experiencing heightened physical and economic insecurity,[100][101] health problems and human-rights violations. In the Ituri region, a violent conflict is occurring between the Lendu and the Hema tribes. Analysts have determined that the conflict has intertribal as well as economic components brought about by the patterns of coltan extraction.

Tantalite (coltan) mining can cause health problems for women and children who work in the mines. As more women turn to mining for income, they are performing dangerous tasks such as pounding the stone which contains tantalum. The fibers this releases get into the lungs and affect both women and babies they carry on their backs.[102] "More worrying, the majority of babies, often on the backs of their mothers during the horrendous task of pounding coltan, have started showing similar signs of disease and pain to those of their mothers".[102]

Child labour is common in the DRC, and the mining industry is no exception.[103] Children in the region are also forced and coerced to become soldiers.

The labor shift from farming to mining has been linked to food shortages and insecurity.[101] Yet the DRC has some of the richest soils and favorable climatic conditions for food production on the African continent. Before the reign of Mobutu Sese Seko, the DRC was one of the major exporters of food to the rest of Africa. "The richly fertile soil (especially that in the eastern highlands which is volcanic in origin) could produce enough food to feed half of Africa, but the country is so poor that at present its people do not produce enough food to feed themselves".[104] As reported by the BBC in 2017, according to Global Witness, more than 20% of the DRC's mining revenue is being lost "due to corruption and mismanagement"; more than $750 million has gone missing since 2014.[105]

Environmental and occupational health edit

Civilian populations have suffered significant health impacts from mining and the associated conflicts. A 2009 study in Katanga Province found "substantial exposure to several metals, especially in children. The urinary Co concentrations found in this population are the highest ever reported for a general population."[106] In 2016, researchers discovered extensive metal contamination in the fish in Katanga's Lake Tshangalele, near mining and other metallurgical operations in Likasi, in species commonly eaten by the local population.[107] A study of coltan miners in North Kivu Province also found very high levels of exposure.[108] Workers at the Ruashi Mine reported headaches and musculoskeletal and respiratory disorders.[109] Environmental contamination in soils has been shown to correlate with proximity to former mining sites: "These values are much higher than the sediment guidelines for the protection of aquatic life and international soil clean-up standards. Enrichment factor and geoaccumulation index results indicated important contribution of mining activities to the study sites pollution in addition to natural background."[110]

The exploitation of natural resources is directly related to the ongoing conflict in the region and subsequent humanitarian crises.[43][page needed][111][112] These health impacts come from labor, human rights violations, and collapse of social norms. Health and safety standards are largely specified in Congolese law, but government agencies have not enforced them effectively, so there are many grave labor violations. Minimum wage laws are rarely followed at mines. Work week hour standards, overtime payment and rest periods are largely ignored as well. Child labor laws are rarely enforced; child laborers comprise up to 30% of the mining labor force. Deaths and violent injury at mining work sites are commonplace.[113][114]

Civilians, including large numbers of children, have been regularly forced into labor, especially as miners and soldiers. Many miners become enslaved when they fail to pay back debt to their employer.[114] Rebel and militia groups commit widespread human rights abuses, including rape, enslavement, torture, disappearances and killing of civilians.[115] These groups compete for finances from illegal mining.[116] Reports indicate that corporations have facilitated these abuses by obtaining minerals from areas controlled by these groups.[113] Sexual violence is an especially widespread and devastating issue across the country. Between 1.69 and 1.80 million women reported being raped in their lifetime.[115] Around mines, survival prostitution, sex slavery, and forced child prostitution have been observed.[113] This widespread sexual violence contributes to the spread of HIV/AIDS as well.[117]

During the Second Congo War, three million civilians died, largely due to malnutrition or disease. Nearly as many were internally displaced.[116] Destruction of agricultural land and cattle, and the interest in mining profits, led to a decrease in food access and increase in malnutrition.[112][118]

As of 2001, assessment and assistance by outside organizations has been difficult, as access to mining areas has been limited by poor road infrastructure, corrupt government officials and hostile militias.[112] Recently, reductions in mortality rate have been documented, linked to improvements in security, humanitarian and politic issues.[119] As of 2002 improvements were limited by continued unregulated mining. Exploitation of natural resources by rebel groups supplying international corporations continues to impair the growth of peace and stability.[47]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Coghlan, Benjamin; et al. (2006-01-07). "Mortality in the Democratic Republic of Congo: a nationwide survey". The Lancet. 367 (9504): 44–51. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(06)67923-3. PMID 16399152. S2CID 2400082.
  • "Congo, Democratic Republic of the". CIA World Fact Book. 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  • (Report). Amnesty International. 11 September 2023. Archived from the original on 20 September 2023.
  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-04-18.
  • Siy, Alexandra (1993). The Efe: People of the Ituri Rainforest. New York: Dillon Press. ISBN 0875185517.
  • Söderberg, Mattias (2006-02-22). . DanChurchAid. Archived from the original on 2009-07-09. Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  • Wolfire, Deanna M.; Brunner, Jake; Sizer, Nigel (June 1998). "Forests and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Opportunity in a time of crisis" (PDF). World Resources Institute. Retrieved 2009-05-20.

External links edit

  • by Elizabeth Dias, Time Magazine, July 24, 2009
  • , International Peace Information Service. Interactive, searchable map of all mining concessions in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, based on Cadastre Minier (CaMi) data, July 27, 2010.
  • Thomas R. Yager (June 2014). "The Mineral Industry of Congo (Kinshasa)" (PDF). 2012 Minerals Yearbook. U.S. Geological Survey. p. 11. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
  • Mining security in Africa

mining, industry, democratic, republic, congo, this, article, needs, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, december, 2023, mining, industry, democratic, republic, congo, french, industrie, minière. This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information December 2023 The mining industry of the Democratic Republic of the Congo French Industrie miniere de la Republique Democratique du Congo produces copper diamonds tantalum tin gold and more than 63 of global cobalt production 1 Minerals and petroleum are central to the DRC s economy making up more than 95 of the value of its exports 2 A sample from the Kolwezi area with green colored Malachite containing copper and darker Heterogenite containing cobalt Contents 1 Regulation and organization 1 1 Industrial mines 1 2 Semi industrial and artisanal mines 1 3 Supply chain regulation 2 By product 2 1 Copper and cobalt 2 2 Diamonds 2 3 Gold 2 4 Lithium 2 5 Tantalum Tin and Tungsten 2 6 Others 3 History 3 1 Pre colonial mining c 14th century 3 2 Congo Free State and Belgian Congo 1885 1960 3 3 DRC and Zaire 1960 1997 3 4 Mass scale looting 1998 3 5 Mining resumes 2001 present 3 6 IMF loan for debt relief 2009 2012 4 Foreign involvement 4 1 Canada 4 2 China 5 Impacts of natural resource extraction on the DRC 5 1 Environmental impacts 5 2 Socio cultural repercussions 5 3 Environmental and occupational health 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksRegulation and organization editMining law in the DRC is given by the mining code which was passed into law by the Joseph Kabila administration in 2018 This replaced the previous code passed by Kabila in 2002 near the end of the Second Congo War The revised code was opposed by many multinational mining companies since it introduced new taxes and removed a stability clause protecting existing investments from changes to regulations 3 4 5 Industrial mines edit nbsp A large industrial copper mine in Kolwezi Most large industrial mines are run by joint ventures between a foreign company and one of the DRC s state owned parastatal mining companies Large scale exploration permits permis de recherches PR and exploitation permits permis d exploitation PE are officially granted by the DRC Mining Register cadastre minier CAMI Such ventures typically require years of planning and involve millions of dollars of investment The largest financiers are the Congolese firm Rawbank which as of 2022 had leant out 820 million to mining companies and the Kenyan firm Equity Group Holdings 6 Semi industrial and artisanal mines edit nbsp Artisanal miners mining wolframite and cassiterite in Kailo Territory See also Artisanal mining Much mining has been done in small artisanal mining operations sometimes known as Artisanal and Small Scale Mining ASM 7 These small scale mines were unregulated 8 with high levels of child labor and workplace injury Officially artisanal mining is authorized in specially designated Artisanal Exploitation Zones AEZ However in practice these zones are comparatively small and most artisanal mining takes place elsewhere where it is common for artisanal miners to trespass onto industrial sites to work Artisanal miners at a particular site are often organized into a cooperative Most artisanal mining is carried out with simple hand tools Semi industrial mining refers to operations which make use of some degree of mechanization but with less investment than industrial operations run by large companies Supply chain regulation edit This section contains text that is written in a promotional tone Please help improve it by removing promotional language and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic text written from a neutral point of view November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Conflict minerals law Today larger mining companies and non for profit organisations are addressing these complex issues and are continuously adopting international guidance and initiatives that helps set up regulations on a community to community basis with government support and involvement A number of initiatives are the ESG Environmental Social and Governance and IRMA Initiative for Responsible Mining Assurance One such globally recognised certification is the 3T iTSCi 9 the only widely implemented and accepted mineral traceability and due diligence system in the region for the 3T minerals Tin Tantalum and Tungsten an internationally recognised certification for responsible mining and traceability under the 2010 Dodd Frank Act Today four central African countries including the Democratic Republic of Congo DRC provides legitimate and ethical 3T minerals ITSCI is the only industry initiative with standards 100 aligned with the OECD Guidance 9 Much has been done in the last 15 years providing artisanal and small scale miners a support network through iTSCi to build the foundations and regulate the industry it also offers safety to the community participants and miners education and training safe practices human rights protection to the environment for sustainable practices and manage the social aspect At the end of 2019 ITSCI has seen to 2000 mines employment of around 80 000 miners and the supply of over 2000 tonnes of tin tantalum and tungsten minerals per month 9 A report had been done by Pact in 2015 detailing iTSCi s progress over the previous five years it discusses the successes the challenges ahead and the work yet to be done 10 Mining can occur within protected areas and around endangered or threatened species As of 2008 update many ASM operations existed for minerals such as coltan citation needed ASM operations employ a significant portion of the DRC s population estimates range up to one fifth of the population or 12 5 million people 8 Problems stemming from artisanal mining include disruption of families mining related illnesses environmental damage child labor prostitution and rape 11 12 There is a push globally by the EU and major car manufacturers for global production of cobalt tin tantalum tungsten and lithium to be sourced and produced sustainably the materials needed for the new technologies that are being deployed as the globe transforms into new energy systems Companies are adopting and practising ESG initiatives in line with OECD Guidance and putting in place evidence of zero to low carbon footprint activities in the supply chain production of lithium ion batteries A 2010 US law required American companies to disclose the source for conflict minerals tin tantalum tungsten and gold Amnesty International are now advocating for cobalt to be added to this list to ensure transparency amongst tech giants and traceability of the supply chain These initiatives are already taking place with major mining companies Artisanal and Small Scale Mining companies ASM Car manufacturers and battery manufacturer supply chains Tesla VW BMW BASF Glencore are participating in several initiatives such as the Responsible Cobalt Initiative and Cobalt for Development study In 2018 BMW Group in partnership with BASF Samsung SDI and Samsung Electronics have launched a pilot project in the DRC over one pilot mine to improve conditions and address challenges for artisanal miners and the surrounding communities BMW s involvement in these projects suggests they may need to source additional supply of cobalt from DRC mines in future having a long term strategic approach to sustainability in this region In the US the 2010 Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act has required retailers and manufacturers to track and publish the amount of conflict minerals sourced from the DRC In August 2012 the U S Securities and Exchange Commission SEC issued the final regulations 13 56274 56275 However the regulation requiring manufacturers to publicly disclose the use of conflict materials was challenged by the National Association of Manufacturers as a First Amendment violation and overturned in 2014 The DC Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the decision in 2015 14 By product editCopper and cobalt edit Main article Copper mining in the Democratic Republic of the Congo In the DRC copper and cobalt resources are mined in the south of the country in the Copperbelt in the Lualaba and Haut Katanga Provinces Most cobalt in the DRC is found in these copper mines The south of the DRC is more politically stable than the eastern DRC so copper and cobalt mining generally has comparatively fewer conflict resource concerns compared to the 3TG minerals mined in the eastern DRC The majority of copper cobalt mining is carried out on an industrial scale by various joint ventures between a foreign company and the Congolese state owned Gecamines as a minority partner Glencore s decision to mothball its Mutanda mine in August 2019 in the Congo citing cobalt and copper operation is uneconomic due to falling commodities prices and an increase in a government royalty tax during the years of Kabila influence Mutanda the world s largest cobalt mine was pegged to transition to care and maintenance temporary closure by year end 2019 the world s largest and responsible for 20 global output Artisanal mining of copper and cobalt usually by hand is also widespread In December 2019 the DRC government announced the Enterprise Generale du Cobalt EGC the state owned miner Gecamines would become the state controlled buyer of cobalt to purchase and market all cobalt from small scale artisanal miners accounting for 15 to 30 of cobalt production that is not mined industrially This in effect will centralise the trade help better regulate the industry in the DRC by fighting mining fraud and maximise state revenues 15 However as of May 2022 the company had not yet begun purchasing any cobalt and the Congolese minister of mines was considering canceling the company s cobalt buying monopoly 16 In the United States Tesla alongside Google Apple and others were sued by a human rights group in December 2019 for artisanal cobalt mined under unsafe and unethical conditions including the use of child labour in the sourcing of cobalt in their supply chains 17 The lawsuit was later dismissed 18 Diamonds edit nbsp Rough diamonds from the Democratic Republic of the Congo Their yellow color is due to the presence of impurities which absorb blue light Diamond mining in the DRC is done mostly by artisanal miners and almost exclusively by hand 19 Artisanal diamond mining employs an estimated 1 million people in the DRC 20 Despite being one of the world s largest diamond produces by volume fewer diamonds from DRC are of gemstone quality compared to other countries and more diamonds are of the less expensive industrial grade variety 21 Diamond mining centers include Tshikapa capital of Kasai Province In 2022 a mining collapse in the Tshikpa area killed several dozen artisanal miners An industrial diamond miner in the DRC the state company Societe Miniere de Bakwanga MIBA also has long operated diamond mines near Mbuji Mayi in Kasai Oriental province In 1990 one of the largest colorless diamonds in the world the Millennium Star was found in the Mbuji Mayi area In 2013 the assets and debt of the state controlled Societe Congolaise d Investissement Minier Sprl SCIM were given to a new 50 50 joint venture between the Congolese government and the Anhui Foreign Economic Construction Group Societe Anhui Congo d Investissement Minier Sprl SACIM According to the deal Anhui promised to spend 100 million on various infrastructure projects 22 By 2017 SACIM produced 85 of the industrially mined diamonds in the DRC 23 MIBA s and SACIM s mining permits are directly adjacent to each other 24 Gold edit The Twangiza Namoya gold belt in the eastern DRC contains large gold deposits as well as the Kilo Moto greenstone belt in northeast corner of the DRC Mines include the large industrial Kibali Gold Mine as well as many small artisanal mines Gold from the DRC is often a conflict mineral and is often used to fund rebel groups in the DRC by smuggling gold over the border into nearby countries such as Uganda 25 In August 2021 South Kivu governor Theo Kasi banned six small Chinese mining companies operating in the province for failing to register their businesses a move subsequently endorsed by the Chinese Ministry of foreign affairs 26 In March 2022 the United States Department of the Treasury sanctioned African Gold Refinery Ltd a large gold refinery based in Uganda owned by Belgian businessman Alain Goetz blaming the company for accepting hundreds of millions of dollars worth of gold from the DRC without questioning its origin 27 28 In December 2022 Goetz was also sanctioned by the European Union 29 Lithium edit See also Manono Kitolo mine The DRC has globally significant lithium reserves As of 2022 there are no active lithium mines in the DRC but several projects are in development 30 Lithium deposits include Manono Kitolo mine which formerly produced tin and coltan until it was closed in 1982 31 Tantalum Tin and Tungsten edit See also Coltan mining and ethics The so called 3T minerals standing for tantalum tin and tungsten are mostly mined in relatively small scale artisanal mines in the eastern DRC Coltan is mined in the DRC mostly in the eastern part of the country in places like the Rubaya mines Coltan consists of mixtures of the minerals columbite and tantalite in varying proportions which can be refined into niobium and tantalum respectively Cassiterite is a mineral containing tin It is mined in mines such as Bisie Tungsten is also mined in the DRC The 3T minerals have been described as conflict minerals due to their connections to funding violence such as the ongoing Kivu conflict Several initiatives exist to source conflict free extraction with mixed reception as to their effectiveness Others edit Industrial mining of other minerals has also occurred in the DRC In contrast to copper cobalt which is central to the DRC economy these other resources are more peripheral and many of the mines are not necessarily active Coal was mined at near the town of Luena Haut Lomami fr in the modern Haut Lomami province by Societe des Charbonnages de la Luena starting in 1922 Peak production occurred in 1955 at 429 000 tons which by 1974 had slowly declined to 103 000 tons 32 After discovering the deposit in 1911 and having its opening delayed by the first world war Geomines operated an underground coal mine west of Kalemie along the Lukuga River from 1923 until 1931 33 34 There are significant manganese deposits from Kisenge Kamata Kapolo in Lualaba Province totaling about 12 Mt of ore 35 36 Manganese is also found at Kasekelesa and Mwene Ditu 37 Mining at the Kisenge was begun in 1951 by the Forrest Group In March 2018 1000 tons of manganese ore from the mine made up the first train of the reopened Benguela Railway following decades of closure due to the Angolan civil war The shipment was from the DRC parastatal Entreprise Miniere de Kisenge Manganese EMKM 38 The DRC has some uranium deposits most notably the Shinkolobwe deposit which has among the highest Uranium grades in the world Historically uranium from the Shinkolobwe mine was used in several nuclear weapons programs including serving as the majority of the raw material for the United States Manhattan Project Officially the mine is closed but illicit artisanal uranium mining has continued though who is buying the uranium is not publicly known 39 Beginning as a large open pit copper mine in 1924 the Kipushi Mine eventually became an underground producer of zinc germanium and silver Closed since 1993 the owners of the mine plan to restart production in the 2020s 40 History editPre colonial mining c 14th century edit Mining in the DRC was carried out for centuries before colonial powers arrived For example the Katanga Cross made from sand cast copper existed from at least the 14th century and evolved in use first as a symbol of wealth and later a form of currency 41 At the time of the Berlin conference that precipitated the Scramble for Africa the copper mining region of the DRC was controlled by the Yeke Kingdom headed by Msiri The kingdom had an already well established trade network in resources with copper from the Katanga region making up an important part 42 Congo Free State and Belgian Congo 1885 1960 edit nbsp Belgian Congo Katanga copper mineSeveral mining companies were established under Belgian rule such as Union Miniere du Haut Katanga in 1906 Forminiere in 1913 and Societe miniere du Beceka in 1919 Mines active in this period included the Kipushi Mine For example the Belgian colonial administrator Georges Moulaert was active in setting up several mining companies but was publicly criticized for heavy use of forced labour in his gold mining operations DRC and Zaire 1960 1997 edit During the Congo crisis Belgian companies were significant supporters of the failed attempts by the State of Katanga and South Kasai to establish their own states independent of the DRC Following the end of the crisis most of the mining assets of Belgian owned companies were nationalized as Congolese state owned companies usually known as parastatal companies Mining companies in the DRC Belgian mining company DRC mining company Main productionUnion Miniere du Haut Katanga UMHK La Generale des Carrieres et des Mines Gecamines Societe de developpement industriel et minier du Congo Sodimico Copper cobalt miningSociete internationale forestiere et miniere du Congo Forminiere Diamond miningSociete miniere du Beceka Mibeka Societe Miniere de Bakwanga Miba Diamond miningCompagnie Miniere des Grands Lacs MGL Syndicat Miniere de l Etain Symetain Societe Miniere et Industrielle du Kivu Sominki 3TG miningCompagnie Geologique et Miniere des Ingenieurs et Industriels belges Geomines Societe Geologique et Miniere du Congo Gemico 3TG miningSociete des Mines d Or de Kilo Moto de Sokimo Societe Miniere de Kilo Moto Sokimo Gold miningMass scale looting 1998 edit During the Second Congo War mass scale looting of mineral assets by all combatant forces Congolese Rwandan Ugandan and foreign civilians took place The small artisanal mining operations the fighters were robbing sometimes shut down afterwards and larger foreign businesses reduced operations as well After Rwanda Uganda and Burundi s successful 1998 invasion of eastern and southeastern DRC in the Second Congo War 1998 2003 mass scale looting took root according to the United Nations 43 8 While initial invasion tactics were still being worked out military commanders were already making business deals with foreign companies for the Congo s vast mineral reserves 43 Between September 1998 and August 1999 stockpiles of minerals agricultural products timber and livestock were illegally confiscated from Congolese businesses piled onto trucks and sold as exports from the confiscating countries 44 Rwandan and Ugandan troops forced local businesses to shut their doors by robbing and harassing civilian owners Cars were stolen to such an extent that Uganda showed a 25 increase in automobile ownership in 1999 44 DARA Forest Company illegally logged then sold Congolese timber on the international market as its own export 45 46 An American Mineral Fields executive allowed rebels to use his private Learjet in return for a 1 billion mining deal 47 Global Witness in 2004 described the mining corporations rush to acquire coltan rich land in the rebel territory of the DRC as a continuation of the pattern of exploitation in play since the 1885 Conference of Berlin 47 48 Mining resumes 2001 present edit Following the peace accord in 2003 the focus returned to mining Rebel groups supplied international corporations through unregulated mining by soldiers locals organized by military commanders and by foreign nationals The political framework was unstable The mass looting died down as stocks of minerals were depleted and soldiers were encouraged by their commanders to take part in small scale looting which started an active extraction phase 43 8 Natural resources that were not stolen were often purchased with counterfeit Congolese francs which contributed to inflation Air transportation companies that once operated in the Congo disappeared and were replaced by companies affiliated with foreign armies The Congolese government lost tax revenue from natural resources entering or leaving its air fields air services were controlled by Rwandan and Ugandan troops who routinely exported coltan from the Congo The increase in air transportation networks also increased exploitation because of the new transport routes 43 page needed Coltan is the most profitable mineral export from the Congo but it is particularly difficult to track because it is often listed as cassiterite for which export taxes are lower Coltan had been illegally extracted and sold via Burundi since 1995 three years before the invasion began 43 page needed The International Monetary Fund IMF stated that Burundi has no gold diamonds columbotantalite copper cobalt or basic metals mining operations but has nonetheless been exporting them since 1998 43 22 Likewise Rwanda and Uganda had no known production sites for many of the minerals they exported at vastly increased rates after they invaded the DRC 43 page needed Free zone areas make diamonds difficult to track because they can be repackaged and legally sold as diamonds from that country 43 17 The DRC exported few minerals after the invasion because its rural infrastructure was destroyed mining and agricultural outputs waned 43 page needed yet the air transportation networks new transport routes increased exploitation by the invaders 43 page needed In 2000 Rwanda spent 70 million supporting about 25 000 troops and Uganda spent 110 million supporting twice as many troops 43 page needed Rwanda and Uganda financed their war efforts through commercial deals profit sharing with companies and taxation among other things Rwandan soldiers stole coltan collected by villagers and sold it to diamond dealers From the coltan trade alone the Rwandan army may have collected 20 million per month and coltan profits have been used to pay back loans from foreign creditors 43 Rebel groups MLC RCD Goma and RCD ML each made their own deals with foreign businessmen for cash and or military equipment 43 Battlefields most commonly centered on areas that held a lot of diamond and coltan potential and foreign armies occupation of the eastern region was maintained by illegal resource exploitation 43 page needed For 1 million per month rebel group RCD Goma gave a coltan monopoly to SOMIGL which they in turn poured into efforts to gain control from RCD ML of mineral loaded land 43 page needed To get fast cash to gain control of government land the DRC gave a diamond monopoly to Dan Gertler s International Diamond Industries IDI which was supposed to pay the Congolese government 20 million for it But it paid only 3 million yet continued to extract diamonds from the region and sell them internationally 43 page needed Upon request of the IMF and World Bank the DRC liberalized diamond trade after which IDI threatened to sue for breach of contract a contract they themselves did not honor 43 page needed Corporations and Western countries purchasing coltan from Rwanda Uganda or Burundi were aware of its origin aid from western donors was funneled directly into Rwandan and Ugandan war efforts citation needed The German government gave a loan to a German citizen to build his coltan export business in the DRC for which he enlisted the help of RCD Goma soldiers Mineral plunder in the DRC was easy once the central authority had collapsed because of the extremely weak financial system as well as the international corporations and governments that imported illegal minerals disregarding illegal conflicts on the part of proper standards 43 page needed The US documented that many minerals were purchased from the DRC even though the DRC had no record of exporting them 47 A lack of state stability combined with international corporations and foreign governments interest in investing in Congolese minerals increased the pace at which the DRC was shaken from its fragile foundation The UN identified the perpetrators of illegal resource exploitation in the DRC but was unable to help prevent the economic exploitation of the country 47 IMF loan for debt relief 2009 2012 edit nbsp View of Kamoto mine in 2006In 2009 the DRC signed a loan contract with the International Monetary Fund IMF for 12 billion of debt relief in 2010 The loan included trade conditions such as liberalization of the diamond trade 49 50 The same year the IFC began working with the DRC on legal and regulatory improvements through an advisory service called Conflict Affected States in Africa CASA It suspended most activities during a dispute between IFC and the DRC over the expropriation of a mining investment 51 14 In September 2010 the Forces democratiques de liberation du Rwanda FDLR a group of mostly Hutu rebels were reported to exploit timber gold and coltan in North Kivu and South Kivu 52 In September 2010 the government banned mining in the east of the country to crack down on illegal organisations and corruption 53 In 2011 the DRC was accused of selling off billions of dollars of mining assets at knockdown prices citation needed In 2012 the DRC began reviewing its 2002 mining code It received warnings from the World Bank was heavily lobbied by mining companies and investors who wanted to be included in the revision discussions and did not complete the project 54 In 2012 the DRC failed to provide sufficient details on the process whereby state mining company Gecamines ceded mining assets to a company based in the British Virgin Islands and the IMF called off a 530 million loan 55 At the end of 2012 the IMF suspended the last loan payments because of a lack of transparency in the DRC s process for awarding mining contracts 50 The mining sector has since expanded but commodity prices have declined and this has hampered the DRC s progress In July 2013 the IFC advisory service CASA re engaged and helped the DRC adopt and implement the Organization for the Harmonization of Business Law in Africa OHADA Treaty 51 Despite Congolese military operations to take Kinshasa mines from the Mai Mai militia and the FDLR the guerillas still controlled some of the mines and created disturbances In 2014 Kabila told mining companies in Katanga province to postpone plans that would require more power due to an energy crisis 56 In March 2016 42 NGOs urged Kabila to update the 2002 mining code after a draft was submitted to parliament in March but Kabila decided to wait until metal markets recovered 57 Foreign involvement editIn 2011 at least twenty five international mining companies were active in the D R Congo according to Datamonitor 360 citation needed Canadian domiciled mining companies had the highest presence with nine in total African Metals Corporation Banro Corporation DiamondCore El Nino Ventures First Quantum Minerals ICS Copper Systems Lundin Mining and Anvil Mining misidentified according to whom as Australian and Katanga Mining misidentified according to whom as British 58 Seven firms were incorporated in Australia Austral Africa Resoiurces BHP AVZ Minerals Green Machine Development Corporation Lindian Resources Mawson West and Tiger Resources Three were incorporated in South Africa African Rainbow Minerals and AngloGold Ashanti two in the United Kingdom Asa Resources Group and Randgold Resources two from the United States Century Aluminum Copper amp Gold and one each from China CIC Mining Resources with Japanese Eco Energy Group s African subsidiary Eco Project Company Morocco Managem and Switzerland Xstrata 58 In 2008 and 2009 the Congolese operations of larger international companies AngloGold Ashanti 59 BHP Billiton 60 and Xstrata 61 were all in the exploration and development phase while Canada had four companies Anvil Mining 62 First Quantum Minerals 63 Katanga Mining 64 and Lundin Mining 65 involved in large scale commercial extraction for several years or more Canada edit In 2004 the Congolese military killed between seventy and one hundred civilians in the town of Kilwa near Anvil Mining s Dikulushi mine which resulted in legal proceedings against Anvil Mining in the DRC and Canada investigations by the Australian Federal Police and by the World Bank Group s Office of the Compliance Advisor Ombudsman citation needed In 2005 the World Bank s Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency MIGA funded the first DRC project by Canada and Ireland as co investors on behalf of the Dikulushi Mine held by Anvil Mining in Katanga Province 66 According to the Congolese government in 2009 Canadian companies held US 4 5 billion in mining related investments in the DR Congo 67 In 2009 First Quantum active in the D R C since 1997 68 had reported its corporate social responsibility contributions amounted to 3 of the Congolese gross national income 69 It was the DRC s largest taxpayer that year accounting for between one eighth and one quarter of collected revenue 70 Since 2009 First Quantum Minerals 63 71 and Heritage Oil 72 have had their mining permits revoked by the DRC government First Quantum closed all its Congolese operations in 2010 and in concert with other stakeholders initiated international arbitration proceedings against the Congolese government 73 The Congolese revocation was seen as a rebuke for the Government of Canada s alleged attempts to obstruct 74 the negotiation of International Monetary Fund and World Bank debt relief to the DRC in 2010 75 76 In 2012 First Quantum s legal dispute with the DRC ended in an out of court settlement 77 At the end of the 2000s the DRC ranked either first or second largest clarification needed among African countries for Canadian mining 78 full citation needed The Government of Canada reported 28 Canadian mining and exploration companies operating in the D R Congo between 2001 and 2009 with four carrying out commercial scale extraction collectively these companies assets in the DRC ranged between Cdn 161 million in 2003 and 5 2 billion in 2008 78 Canada s mining ministry Natural Resources Canada estimated the 2009 value of Canadian owned mining assets in the D R Congo at Cdn 3 3 billion ten times more than in 2001 making the DRC the African country with second highest African level of Canadian investment after Madagascar and Canadian investment in the Congo representing a sixth of total Canadian mining assets in Africa 78 In 2011 Natural Resources Canada valued Canadian mining assets in the DRC at Cdn 2 6 billion 79 The majority of Canadian based mining companies currently when or previously active in the DR Congo have been involved in either exploration and development or large scale mining of the Congo s copper and cobalt resources Based on World Bank estimates three Canadian companies First Quantum Minerals Lundin Mining in partnership with the US firm Freeport McMoRan Copper amp Gold and Katanga Mining were predicted in 2010 to create more than two thirds of total Congolese copper output from 2008 to 2013 and for more than two thirds of total Congolese cobalt output from 2008 to 2014 70 These companies and Canadian incorporated Anvil Mining were involved in industrial copper and cobalt extraction during 2000 2010 As of early 2011 another eight junior Canadian mining companies including Ivanhoe Nickel amp Platinum and Rubicon Minerals Corporation reported holdings of copper and cobalt concessions in Katanga province Nine Canadian junior mining companies including Kinross Gold previously held copper and or cobalt concessions but have since when abandoned them or sold them to other Canadian or South African firms In the diamond sector Montreal based Dan Gertler has been active since 1997 80 81 Seven other Canadian junior companies reported owning properties in the DRC during 2001 2009 including Canaf Group through its 2008 acquisition of diamond mining company New Stone Mining 82 and BRC DiamondCore Montreal based Shamika Resources has been exploring for tantalum niobium tin and tungsten in the Eastern DRC 83 and Loncor Resources for gold platinum tantalum and other metals citation needed Two Canadian registered companies own petroleum concessions in the DRC Heritage Oil whose founder and former CEO is Tony Buckingham and EnerGulf Resources citation needed 84 Up until early 2011 four of the nine International Finance Corporation sponsored or proposed D R C projects were for Canadian owned companies active in the DRC to Kolwezi Kingamyambo Musonoi Tailings SARL owned by Adastra Minerals 50 0m invested in 2006 85 Africo Resources Ltd acquisition of Cdn 8m in Africo shares invested in 2007 86 and Kingamyambo Musonoi Tailings SARL as acquired by First Quantum proposed in 2009 at a value of US 4 5 million in equity funding 87 88 In 2011 Canada s Fraser Institute annual survey of mining executives reported the DRC s ranking of its mining exploration investment favourability fell from eighth poorest in 2006 down to second poorest in 2010 among 45 African Asian and Latin American countries and 24 jurisdictions in Canada Australia and the United States and this was attributed to the uncertainty created by the nationalization and revision of contracts by the Kabila government 89 In 2012 Banro Corporation began gold production at its Twangiza Mine 90 after owning gold concessions in the South Kivu and Maniema provinces the Twangiza Namoya gold belt since 1996 91 Six other Canadian companies have previously owned Congolese gold properties including Barrick Gold 1996 1998 92 93 and Moto Goldmines 2005 2009 China edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Belt and Road Initiative participant mapChina and the DRC signed an MOU on the Belt and Road Initiative BRI cooperation during a tour of China s Foreign Minister Wang Yi making the DRC China s 45th Belt and Road Initiative partner in Africa Also known as the New Silk Road the initiative consists of a network of railways pipelines highways and ports linking these networks of infrastructure to other Belt and Road Initiative partner countries in Russia Europe India Central Asia and Southeast Asia A positive move for the DRC and China relations when China decided to write off debts from the DRC and the new partnering for the Belt and Road Initiative this will encourage further cooperation between the two countries and encourage investment from more Chinese miners like China Molybdenum to enter investments into the Congolese copper and cobalt industry Impacts of natural resource extraction on the DRC editEnvironmental impacts edit Resource extraction has many impacts on the cultural and environmental diversity of the DRC it is difficult to quantify the environmental degradation of the country which is unstable and difficult for researchers to enter It is also always difficult to quantify loss of biodiversity as animals are mobile and the lack of roads and navigable rivers hamper transportation into wilderness areas for researchers 94 95 Mining can be an intensive process and has affected some wilderness areas including national parks and wildlife reserves such as Kahuzi Biega and the Okapi Wildlife Reserve both of which are World Heritage Sites Mining in these areas is typically artisanal a small scale mining method that takes place in river beds and can cumulatively be very environmentally damaging Artisanal mining degrades riparian zones creating erosion and heavy silting of the water The tailings are often dumped into the rivers and can be contaminated with mercury and cyanide degrading the health of the river systems and putting people and wildlife at risk 96 97 Miners and refugees are relocating to parks in search of minerals a reported 10 000 people have moved into Kahuzi Biega and 4 000 to the Okapi Wildlife Reserve when This increases the pressures on wildlife as timber is cut down and used for cooking fuel and wildlife is killed for bushmeat Also as people enter into these areas animals such as primates are collected for trade on the black market Others are poached for their hides or for their tusks like elephants 94 95 The extent of logging has been difficult to quantify Much of the logging that occurs is primarily for target hardwood species rather than clear cutting which can be assessed by satellite imaging 94 Observations have shown an increased number of logging trucks moving across borders Logging destroys valuable animal habitat and increases access into forested areas making it easier for poachers miners to go there 94 Socio cultural repercussions edit See also Conflict resource Many factors contribute to the Democratic Republic of the Congo s severe socio economic hardships and not all resource extraction operations have had an entirely negative impact on Congolese society at large That said the negative consequences of some forms of resource extraction such as coltan mining are devastating 98 For example as worldwide demand for consumer electronics has increased so has the demand for tantalum or coltan DCA 2006 and reportedly much of the finance sustaining the civil wars in Africa especially in the Democratic Republic of the Congo is directly connected to coltan profits DCA 2006 pp 1 A United Nations report has echoed this assessment In the DRC there are wars both between Congolese and conflicts with neighboring nations when Although these wars have components of intertribal conflict in several cases the conflicts have been induced by external forces such as changes in international support and foreign aid and demand for resource extraction 99 As a result of tantalum mining and wars societies in the eastern regions of the Congo are experiencing heightened physical and economic insecurity 100 101 health problems and human rights violations In the Ituri region a violent conflict is occurring between the Lendu and the Hema tribes Analysts have determined that the conflict has intertribal as well as economic components brought about by the patterns of coltan extraction Tantalite coltan mining can cause health problems for women and children who work in the mines As more women turn to mining for income they are performing dangerous tasks such as pounding the stone which contains tantalum The fibers this releases get into the lungs and affect both women and babies they carry on their backs 102 More worrying the majority of babies often on the backs of their mothers during the horrendous task of pounding coltan have started showing similar signs of disease and pain to those of their mothers 102 Child labour is common in the DRC and the mining industry is no exception 103 Children in the region are also forced and coerced to become soldiers The labor shift from farming to mining has been linked to food shortages and insecurity 101 Yet the DRC has some of the richest soils and favorable climatic conditions for food production on the African continent Before the reign of Mobutu Sese Seko the DRC was one of the major exporters of food to the rest of Africa The richly fertile soil especially that in the eastern highlands which is volcanic in origin could produce enough food to feed half of Africa but the country is so poor that at present its people do not produce enough food to feed themselves 104 As reported by the BBC in 2017 according to Global Witness more than 20 of the DRC s mining revenue is being lost due to corruption and mismanagement more than 750 million has gone missing since 2014 105 Environmental and occupational health edit See also List of mining disasters in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Civilian populations have suffered significant health impacts from mining and the associated conflicts A 2009 study in Katanga Province found substantial exposure to several metals especially in children The urinary Co concentrations found in this population are the highest ever reported for a general population 106 In 2016 researchers discovered extensive metal contamination in the fish in Katanga s Lake Tshangalele near mining and other metallurgical operations in Likasi in species commonly eaten by the local population 107 A study of coltan miners in North Kivu Province also found very high levels of exposure 108 Workers at the Ruashi Mine reported headaches and musculoskeletal and respiratory disorders 109 Environmental contamination in soils has been shown to correlate with proximity to former mining sites These values are much higher than the sediment guidelines for the protection of aquatic life and international soil clean up standards Enrichment factor and geoaccumulation index results indicated important contribution of mining activities to the study sites pollution in addition to natural background 110 The exploitation of natural resources is directly related to the ongoing conflict in the region and subsequent humanitarian crises 43 page needed 111 112 These health impacts come from labor human rights violations and collapse of social norms Health and safety standards are largely specified in Congolese law but government agencies have not enforced them effectively so there are many grave labor violations Minimum wage laws are rarely followed at mines Work week hour standards overtime payment and rest periods are largely ignored as well Child labor laws are rarely enforced child laborers comprise up to 30 of the mining labor force Deaths and violent injury at mining work sites are commonplace 113 114 Civilians including large numbers of children have been regularly forced into labor especially as miners and soldiers Many miners become enslaved when they fail to pay back debt to their employer 114 Rebel and militia groups commit widespread human rights abuses including rape enslavement torture disappearances and killing of civilians 115 These groups compete for finances from illegal mining 116 Reports indicate that corporations have facilitated these abuses by obtaining minerals from areas controlled by these groups 113 Sexual violence is an especially widespread and devastating issue across the country Between 1 69 and 1 80 million women reported being raped in their lifetime 115 Around mines survival prostitution sex slavery and forced child prostitution have been observed 113 This widespread sexual violence contributes to the spread of HIV AIDS as well 117 During the Second Congo War three million civilians died largely due to malnutrition or disease Nearly as many were internally displaced 116 Destruction of agricultural land and cattle and the interest in mining profits led to a decrease in food access and increase in malnutrition 112 118 As of 2001 assessment and assistance by outside organizations has been difficult as access to mining areas has been limited by poor road infrastructure corrupt government officials and hostile militias 112 Recently reductions in mortality rate have been documented linked to improvements in security humanitarian and politic issues 119 As of 2002 improvements were limited by continued unregulated mining Exploitation of natural resources by rebel groups supplying international corporations continues to impair the growth of peace and stability 47 See also editCopper mining in the Democratic Republic of the Congo List of companies based in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Coltan mining and ethics Corruption in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Kleptocracy Gecamines 2017 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Economy of the Democratic Republic of the CongoReferences edit New initiative to support artisanal cobalt mining in the DRC Mining Review 2021 04 01 Retrieved 2022 10 02 Mitchell Jason 2022 02 15 Kinshasa is already Africa s biggest city could cobalt make it the richest Mining Technology Retrieved 2022 10 03 Congo mines say revised code threatens industry 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Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Integrated Regional Information Networks IRIN 2002 01 16 Retrieved 2009 05 17 Worst Forms of Child Labour Congo Dem Rep Global March Against Child Labour 2004 10 07 Archived from the original on 2010 10 10 Retrieved 2010 09 16 Heale Jay 1999 Democratic Republic of the Congo Tarrytown NY Marshall Cavendish Corporation ISBN 978 0 7614 0874 1 BBC News Congo s mining revenue missing Global Witness July 21 2017 Banza Celestin Lubaba Nkulu Nawrot Tim S Haufroid Vincent Decree Sophie De Putter Thierry Smolders Erik Kabyla Benjamin Ilunga Luboya Oscar Numbi Ilunga Augustin Ndala Mutombo Alain Mwanza Nemery Benoit 2009 High human exposure to cobalt and other metals in Katanga a mining area of the Democratic Republic of Congo Environmental Research 109 6 745 52 Bibcode 2009ER 109 745B doi 10 1016 j envres 2009 04 012 PMID 19486963 Squadrone S Burioli E Monaco G Koya M K Prearo M Gennero S Dominici A Abete M C 2016 Human exposure to metals due 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Estimates and Determinants of Sexual Violence Against Women in the Democratic Republic of Congo American Journal of Public Health Washington DC 101 6 1060 1067 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2010 300070 PMC 3093289 PMID 21566049 a b Hayes K Burge R 2003 Coltan Mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo How tantalum using industries can commit to the reconstruction of the DRC Fauna amp Flora International Cambridge UK Fauna amp Flora International Klare MT 2011 Public Health Implications of Resource Wars American Journal of Public Health Washington DC 101 9 1615 1619 doi 10 2105 ajph 2011 300267 PMC 3154227 PMID 21778501 Cox TP 2011o Farming the battlefield the meaning of war cattle and soil in South Kivu Democratic Republic of the Congo Disasters Overseas Development Institute 36 2 233 248 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7717 2011 01257 x PMID 21995623 Coghlan B et al 2011 Update on mortality in the Democratic Republic of Congo results from a third nationwide survey Disasters Disaster Med Public Health Prep 3 2 88 96 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7717 2011 01257 x PMID 21995623 Further reading editCoghlan Benjamin et al 2006 01 07 Mortality in the Democratic Republic of Congo a nationwide survey The Lancet 367 9504 44 51 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 06 67923 3 PMID 16399152 S2CID 2400082 Congo Democratic Republic of the CIA World Fact Book 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 20 DRC Powering Change or Business as Usual Report Amnesty International 11 September 2023 Archived from the original on 20 September 2023 Mortality in the Democratic Republic of Congo a nationwide survey PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2009 04 18 Siy Alexandra 1993 The Efe People of the Ituri Rainforest New York Dillon Press ISBN 0875185517 Soderberg Mattias 2006 02 22 Is there blood on your mobile phone DanChurchAid Archived from the original on 2009 07 09 Retrieved 2009 05 20 Wolfire Deanna M Brunner Jake Sizer Nigel June 1998 Forests and the Democratic Republic of Congo Opportunity in a time of crisis PDF World Resources Institute Retrieved 2009 05 20 External links editFirst Blood Diamonds Now Blood Computers by Elizabeth Dias Time Magazine July 24 2009 Mining Concessions in the DR Congo International Peace Information Service Interactive searchable map of all mining concessions in the Democratic Republic of the Congo based on Cadastre Minier CaMi data July 27 2010 Thomas R Yager June 2014 The Mineral Industry of Congo Kinshasa PDF 2012 Minerals Yearbook U S Geological Survey p 11 Retrieved 19 May 2016 Mining security in Africa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mining industry of the Democratic Republic of the Congo amp oldid 1189605994, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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