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Article

31 Oct 2024

Author:
Sebastian Rodriguez, Climate Home News

Colombia proposes a binding treaty for responsible mining of critical minerals at COP30

Speaker: Ubrei Joe Maimoni, Friends of the Earth Nigeria/Africa, at COP28 in Dubai 2023

"Colombia and Brazil to present proposal for new critical minerals pact at COP30", 30 October 2024

"Colombia and Brazil have launched a push for a new binding global treaty on traceability for the critical minerals needed for the clean energy transition along their entire supply chain – from mining to recycling.

The two countries announced the initiative on the sidelines of the COP16 UN biodiversity summit in the Colombian city of Cali this week. Their plan is to come up with a proposal for the pact by the COP30 UN climate conference to be held in Belém, Brazil, in November 2025.

The initiative picks up on one of the recommendations issued by a UN panel on critical minerals in September, which urged countries to create such a transparency platform to help ensure fair and sustainable extraction of minerals for clean energy supply chains. The UN panel suggested the platform could be piloted in “two or three” mineral-producing countries...

All countries agreed at the COP28 UN climate change summit last year to triple the world’s renewable energy capacity by 2030 – a goal that is set to triple demand for minerals by the same date.

In the race to boost production, uncontrolled expansion of mining activities could cause serious harm to nature and nearby communities, experts have warned. A 2022 study, which reviewed more than 5,000 critical mineral mining projects, found that over half were located on or near Indigenous lands...

At the launch event for the transparency initiative, Norwegian diplomat Lars Vaagen said developed countries did not yet have a common position on whether to support the treaty, but added “what we can promise is that we will follow this initiative very closely”.

Suneeta Kaimal, CEO of the Natural Resource Governance Institute, welcomed the idea but said traceability “is only part of the solution”.

“Traceability alone will have no impact without credible, independent scrutiny of industry actions and impacts against high standards of best practice,” Kaimal told the launch...

Among the two proponents of the traceability pact, Brazil in particular sits on top of vast reserves of nickel, manganese and rare earth metals. According to the International Energy Agency, the country holds about a fifth of global reserves of all these minerals, but is still only producing small amounts."