Brazil adopts Canada’s Towards Sustainable Mining initiative

Instituto Brasileiro de Mineração (IBRAM), the national mining association in Brazil, has announced that it will adopt the Towards Sustainable Mining (TSM) initiative, a corporate social responsibility program developed by the Mining Association of Canada (MAC) to improve environmental and social practices in the mining industry.

IBRAM joins six other mining associations around the world, including the second in Latin America, in adopting TSM, an increasingly internationally recognized standard for responsible mining. MAC freely shares TSM with other countries seeking tools to improve the environmental and social performance of their mining industries, including tailings management, engagement with civil society and enhanced transparency and accountability. IBRAM, with MAC’s support, will tailor TSM’s performance areas to reflect the unique aspects of its domestic mining sector and commits to TSM implementation over the next five years.

According to Flávio Ottoni Penido, IBRAM’s President, TSM is a necessary response by Brazil’s mining sector after the tragic tailings dam failures in Brazil in the past few years.  TSM is recognized by many international experts to include international best practices in tailings management, safety and health and other priority areas. “By adopting TSM, we are committing to raise the standards of our industry. TSM will help our mining sector become more transparent, earn the confidence of Brazilian society and achieve its full potential.”

“We are honoured that Brazil has chosen TSM as the vehicle to drive environmental and social performance in its mining sector and are proud of TSM’s increasingly global reach. TSM adherents now include mining associations in seven countries on five continents,” said Pierre Gratton, MAC’s President and CEO. “The addition of IBRAM and Brazil’s large mining sector firmly establishes the TSM initiative as a leading global mining standard.”

MAC and its members launched TSM in 2004. Implementation of the program is mandatory for all MAC members’ Canadian operations, but many voluntarily apply it to their international sites.

TSM requires mining companies to annually assess their facilities’ performance across eight important areas, including tailings management, Aboriginal and community outreach, safety and health, and biodiversity conservation. The results are freely available to the public and are externally-verified every three years to ensure what has been reported is accurate.

To ensure TSM reflects the expectations of civil society and industry stakeholders, it was designed and continues to be shaped by an independent, multi-interest advisory panel. As part of its implementation, IBRAM will implement a similar advisory body to provide this valuable oversight function.