Mining and The Aboriginal Interface 2012
Course Date: September 20, 2012
Total: 5h 35min
Course Date: September 20, 2012
Welcome and Introduction
Karim N. Ramji — Donovan & Company, Vancouver
Law, Sustainability, and the Role of Lawyers: An Easy Embrace or a Complicated Space?
- exploring the space: values, principles, processes, practices—between law and sustainability
- walking the lawyer line between problem maker or solver in land and resource fights and deals
- scaling the face where big problems meet communities, companies, and governments
- advancing the interests of your clients and helping to build a sustainable future
- building of experience from the ground up as a counsel, adjudicator, and mediator
Glenn Sigurdson, QC — Mediator and Counsel, West Vancouver
The Mining Footprint—From Exploration, Development, Construction, and Operation, to Closure
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the physical footprint of mining
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infrastructure and access
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water use impacts
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environmental concerns
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health and safety
Dr. Malcolm Scoble — Professor & Robert E. Hallbauer Chair in Mining Engineering, Norman B. Keevil Institute of Mining Engineering, University of BC, Vancouver
Dr. Janis Shandro — Post-doctoral Fellow, Norman B. Keevil Institute of Mining Engineering, University of BC, Vancouver
Human Rights and the Extractive Sector
- the evolution of CSR
- the human rights framework
- the business case
- risk mitigation
- social licence to operate
- hardening of soft laws
- ruggie—the UN guiding principles on business and human rights
- a new global standard
- human rights due diligence
- leadership examples
Alison Colwell — Manager, Advisory Services, BSR, San Francisco, CA
Networking Break
Indigenous People
- legally unique stakeholders
- legal recognition
- international
- national laws
- gaps in national laws
- FPIC—consent or consult
- ongoing debate—Miningwatch, ICCM
- implications
- alliances with other stakeholders
- due diligence considerations
- partner selection
- ability to bring a project to fruition
- structure of the transaction
- key people remaining?
- project selection
- the CSR footprint?
- expectations/promises made
- status of the relationship
- level of support/opposition
Karim N. Ramji — Donovan & Company, Vancouver
Lunch
Challenges of Implementation: Integrating CSR From Corporate Head Offices to the Local Village
- clear corporate mandate and commitment
- identification and assessment of the project impacts, Indigenous peoples, and vulnerable groups
- human rights impact assessments in context
- local and national issues—spheres of influence
- relationship building exercise—the process
- leadership, integrity, transparency, and communication—the people
- impact benefits agreements
- practical considerations
- case studies
Susan Joyce, MSc, Dip AgSci — On Common Ground Consultants Inc., Vancouver
Networking Break
The Business Case For Sustainability
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business value and the licence to operate
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embedding sustainability in the business
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evolution of risk through sustainability
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implications of sustainability in financing
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evolving requirements for debt
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changing circumstances for equity
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case studies
Ronald O. Nielsen — Senior Director - Global Sustainability at Cliffs Natural Resources, Cleveland, OH
Closing Thoughts
- shifting landscapes
- assess and converting surface risks to development opportunities
- new social contract—now called CSR
Karim N. Ramji — Donovan & Company, Vancouver
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