Community, Environment
September 30 2008
by Amy Lunt, Senior Consultant
Anglo American’s $92 million investment in community and biodiversity projects in Brazil reflects not only the scale of the company’s operations, but the significance of corporate responsibility to its core business.
The mining industry produces some of the most visible and tangible impacts both on local communities and the natural environment. Extractive companies have been at the forefront of efforts to develop sustainable community investment programmes that not only deliver long term benefits to local people, but also measurable benefits. This has been driven in part by the efforts of NGOs who ensure ever increasing exposure of global company practices, but it is also clearly driven by retaining an ongoing licence to operate.
Foreign operators must demonstrate the positives they will bring to a community, to counteract the perceived negatives such as environmental damage and disruption to local communities. In previously unexplored areas this is especially important, as the introduction of a new industry will bring fundamental changes. Specific thought must be given to how the community will continue to grow and thrive, and adapt to its changing environment, once mining operations have concluded.
Anglo American’s SEAT programme enables the company to identify what a community’s needs are and how capacity can be built in the long term. While few companies operations are on the scale of Anglo American’s all large companies who invest in community programmes face the challenge of measurement and impact assessment and could learn from Anglo American’s robust approach to ensure that community investment programmes have maximum impact.
Amy Lunt, amy.lunt@corporate-citizenship.com





