Five artisanal small-scale gold mining companies receive mercury-free processing equipment
As part of measures to promote mercury-free mining in Ghana, five Artisanal Small-Scale Gold Mining (ASGM) companies have received mercury-free processing equipment.
The equipment is worth $60,000 and includes: gold katcha, gold konka, gold cube and gas fueled smelter that would be set up in Dakete, Obeng, Bazuri, Agya Pa Ye and Beaver Mines, all in the Western region.
These companies would serve as demonstration sites for other Mines in their Districts, Municipality and Regions to learn from.
Earlier, the beneficiaries demonstrated on how they would go about their operations and a panel of judges who accessed them decided that the mercury-free processing equipment should be given to them.
Speaking at the handing over function, Mr Yaw Britwum Opoku, Responsible Mining Programme Manager, Solidaridad West Africa, said the Promoting Mercury-Free Mining Project was a three-year United States Department of State-funded initiative implemented by PACT, a US-based Non-Governmental Organization and Solidaridad West Africa.
He said the project was geared towards reducing the use of mercury in Ghana’s small-scale gold mining sector through education, introduction of better technology, strengthen equipment supply chains and demonstrating business incentives for mercury-free gold production.
“According to the World Bank, it was seen as the most indispensable rural non-farm activity fundamental to achieving all 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),” he indicated.
Mr Opoku said “In Ghana, the contribution of small-scale mining to total gold production increased from 2.2 per cent in 1989 to about a third in recent years. The sector also employs about one million people directly (51% women) and supports about four million people indirectly”.
He said despite the massive benefits derived from small-scale gold mining, the sector was bedeviled with several challenges such as deforestation, land degradation, pollution of water bodies and release of mercury and other hazardous chemicals, such as cyanide.
Mr Opoku emphasized that the project would hopefully support small-scale gold mining companies to test mercury-free processing systems to produce gold, which could be marketed as mercury-free.
The project would also carry out a community outreach and media campaign to educate small-scale gold mining communities on the dangers of mercury, responsible use of mercury and mercury-free technologies, promote the procurement of mercury-free processing equipment by other Mines in the project Districts by facilitating engagements between them, financial institutions and mercury-free equipment providers, he said.
According to Mr Opoku, “In order to ensure that majority of miners transition from the use of mercury to mercury-free processing technologies, we would like to appeal to donor organizations to support research organizations, such as the University of Mines and Technology (UMaT) to develop mercury-free mining technologies that are affordable, portable, easy to use and with relatively high ore recovery rates”.
This, he said, would go a long way to ensure that Ghana met its goal of reducing mercury use in small-scale gold mining to 30 per cent by 2030, in accordance with the Minamata Convention on mercury.
Professor Richard Kwasi Amankwah, Vice Chancellor of UMaT, stated that “I am impressed with small scale miners making such strong presentations and defending to convince judges that really they were doing mercury-free processing in their operations and deserve an award”.
He added that “Mercury-free processing was catching up, the Minamata convention was ongoing, and the key stakeholders were trying to gather the necessary data to see how far it had gone and the level of reduction.
“I am aware of many institutions that were also waiting in the field, and I want to encourage everybody to support all these ventures”.
Mr Wilson Zoogah, Senior Principal Inspector of Mines, explained that sometimes people think they delay with issuing licenses but those in charge want to ensure that they follow the due process, adding that “Mining is not just any simple activity, it is an activity that you need to look at it critically and examine all the pros and cons before you issue out a license”.
Mr Joseph Kofi Ababio, Chief Executive Officer of Agya Pa Ye Mines, on behalf of his colleagues expressed appreciation to the organizers for providing them with the opportunity to interact with one another and see how best they could be promoters of mercury-free mining in the small-scale mining industry in Ghana.
Source: GNA