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المحتوى متاح أيضًا باللغات التالية: English, 简体中文, 繁體中文

المقال

1 يوليو 2025

الكاتب:
Chen Yu, Global Witness

Commentary: China must tighten its regulations to achieve responsible mining of transition minerals abroad

"Can China fix the problems with transition mineral mining abroad?", Global Witness, 1 July 2025

[...] do China’s regulations sufficiently address the environmental, social and governance (ESG) impacts of its overseas mining operations?

[...] China often mines in regions where weak governance amplifies risks of environmental degradation and human rights violations.

At home, [...] Requirements for an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA), consideration of the "three simultaneities" [...], ecological restoration [...] and mining safety have been actively updated and implemented [...].

However, the same requirements do not necessarily apply to its mining overseas. [...].

Major Chinese CSoE mining companies – including China Nonferrous Metals Mining Group (CNMC), China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC), China Minmetals, China National Gold Group (CNGG) and Aluminium Corporation of China – faced ESG and human rights controversies abroad. Yet supervisory actions from Beijing were rarely seen.

[...] seven ministries released a Due Diligence Guideline requiring companies [...] to identify, assess and monitor compliance risks [...].

But the Ministry of Ecology and Environment [...] was absent from the Due Diligence Guideline’s issuers, and the Due Diligence Guideline lacked a systematic framework for risk control and traceability [...].

In summary, Chinese mining companies still have a long way to go in implementing Xi’s speech and turning their vision into reality.

In March 2025, the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) [...] requiring listed companies to publish sustainability reports in line with stock exchanges rules.

But disclosing pollutant discharge [...] is only obligatory for companies [...] appearing on government-designated lists for mandatory environmental disclosure.

Communities abroad where mining operations take place frequently report inadequate consultation in project construction and resettlement, leading to a lack of free, prior and informed consent, involuntary displacement, insufficient compensation and the loss of traditional livelihoods.

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