:
Mr. Chair, we are pleased to be invited here to provide a brief overview of Canadian expertise in mining, particularly in remote areas.
[English]
It is really a pleasure to be here with you.
I believe you got a copy of our introductory remarks. I won't go through every line here, to try to give the maximum amount of time for some dialogue, but I would like to highlight a few of the points from this set of opening remarks.
[Translation]
Under the Canadian Constitution, the federal government has broad responsibilities for federal lands, fiscal and monetary policy, international relations and trade, national statistics, and science and technology.
[English]
In the north, the federal government manages mineral resources in the Northwest Territories, in Nunavut, and, in the case of the Yukon, this responsibility is in the process of being devolved to the territory itself.
I think it's important to make one point, and this is that in terms of resources, it really is the provinces, the provincial governments, that own and manage the mineral resources within their own jurisdictions, and they're responsible for land use and decision-making.
The other point I'd like to stress right up front is that our department doesn't set the priorities internationally, nor do we develop international policy and undertake that particular responsibility. Certainly, we'll talk about the Canadian context, what we do, and in terms of what might be applicable to the case of Afghanistan, but I just wanted to put the markers there that it really isn't our position to talk about where our priorities and our policies should be in the international arena.
In terms of the provincial and federal jurisdictions, there a number of shared areas as well, and those are on economic development, environmental protection and conservation, health and safety, and aboriginal economic development and consultation. We work in concert with many other federal government departments on this particular file: for example, with Fisheries and Oceans when it comes to impact on fish habitat; with INAC, or Indian and Northern Affairs, on mining regulations in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut and on aboriginal consultation; with Transport Canada; with HRSDC on skills; with Statistics Canada on some of the statistics; with Industry Canada on some of the mining company directory, to help connect supply of goods and suppliers and services; and of course with our colleagues at DFAIT.
So at NRCan our mandate is to collect and publish statistics on the mineral exploration, development, and production of the mining and metallurgical industries in Canada. We make full and scientific examination and survey of our geological structure and mineralogy of Canada. We have regard to the sustainable development of Canada's mineral resources and their integrated management. And we seek to enhance the responsible development and use of Canada's mineral resources.
On the geoscience front, we certainly provide geoscience as a public good to all Canadians and to other foreign companies in a very open and transparent way so that we can make sure there's maximum benefit and advantage to Canadians as a result of the exploration and the mining and production. We can certainly talk more about that.
In terms of methodology, we certainly are involved with all the various cycles of the mining process, beginning right from the land acquisitions to exploration to advanced exploration, pre-feasibility, feasibility studies, the development of the actual mining projects, the operations of them, the closure, and even rights to the land ownership that's renounced.
Canada is an expert in the area of mining, and we certainly know within our own remote context some of the unique issues. We certainly talk a little bit about the challenges of infrastructure, challenges with environment, challenges with labour, and challenges with some of the social aspects of mining in remote communities and in areas. In Canada, we have a system of a free market, or a free entry system, whereby anybody can come in and stake a claim to a particular geographical area. In other countries, they have auctions, where the governments get involved with assessing what is the value of a particular plot of land and then looking at how do they get the highest bid. That's just another nuance within Canada's context.
We also have, obviously, technical mining expertise, but we rely very heavily on our private industry and our experts within industry to really provide that mining expertise. Certainly some of our laboratories provide some of the technical expertise in the areas of green mining, for example, where we want to make sure that mining is done in the most responsible way: leaving behind the least footprint, making use of the least amount of energy, having the least amount of impact on water, for example, and so on.
I'll stop there. I would be pleased, with my colleagues, to try to answer as best we can the questions you have.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you for coming.
I have one significant question, in terms of why anybody would want to invest in Afghanistan. I'm familiar with Mongolia, and in Mongolia the issue right now is the need for a foreign investment protection act, which the Mongolian government has been somewhat reluctant to bring forth to Parliament, given the fact that in the early 1990s it felt it had been taken advantage of as a new democracy, in terms of royalties and taxes.
If you do not have a FIPA agreement or something of that nature in Afghanistan, if you do not have a steady regime that clearly will be able to deal with royalty issues, infrastructure costs, and taxes, and given the fact that the former minister of mines met with Canadian officials in 2008 and was then sacked in 2009 for a $30 million bribe because of a Chinese copper interest—which he denied, but of course then President Karzai sacked him—I'm not quite sure why mining companies would go to Afghanistan. Not to, of course, add to the fact that they're in a war zone.
The question I have, through you, Mr. Chairman, is this. What kind of advice or assistance do you provide to Canadian companies—companies like Kilo, which is looking at doing a major development there—in terms of protection?
Clearly, any investor wants to make sure its assets are protected. In Mongolia, as you probably know, Canadian companies are the second largest investor and yet we're still dancing with the Mongolian government as to protection for Canadian companies, as well as for others, of course.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and welcome to the committee.
The purpose for which we have asked you to come here is to look at the post-2011 involvement of Canada in Afghanistan, as you know, the non-military portion of it.
Up to now, CIDA and everybody else have been investing in good governance and schools, the priorities that came out of the Manley commission. The committee is looking at that. We have just received, from the Library of Parliament, information pertaining to natural deposits and mining in Afghanistan. One area that Canada can focus on, when this committee looks at it, is to see how we can assist the Afghans in the exploitation of these resources, so that it is a source of income and stability for that country.
Experiences have shown that if there's no good governance, the exploitation tends to be under corruption, and the people do not see the trickle-down benefit of these natural resources that exist there.
This committee wants to look at how Canada can help, because of our record. We have an excellent record of corporate social responsibility along with the mining companies out there. We are considered world experts, and I hope we are better than the Australians.
The issue is, how can this committee look at your department to see how your expertise can be of assistance to Afghanistan's development of these resources for the benefit of its people? We are trying to tie the two now. Of course, you've given us your excellent presentation of what you do in Canada, but this committee wants to look at this issue.
What are your thoughts, and what can you suggest to us that would actually enrich areas where Canada could be beneficial in the development of these resources in Afghanistan?
:
First of all, in my view, Afghanistan is not unique in trying to capitalize on a resource it has and trying to make sure it benefits their population. As I said right up front, we are willing, and we have in the past...we have a track record of sharing our expertise.
There's no magic formula in terms of how we've developed our resource in a responsible way in Canada. Through the various multilateral organizations that I talked about earlier, we've shared that very openly. In fact, other countries as well—Australia, the U.K., the United States, some of the Scandinavian countries--also contribute very openly. The literature is prolific on various websites on those organizations, and so on.
We openly encourage our Afghan colleagues to make better use of the dialogue that exists already, and to take advantage of the intergovernmental forum on mining and minerals, for example. There are 43 countries that belong to it. It's a voluntary organization, and they share “the secrets”. We share very openly about good governance, competitive environment, fiscal regimes, a regulatory environment, a competitive strategy that looks at exploitation of the resource, doing it in an environmentally friendly way, and making sure there is good stewardship of those resources. These are hallmarks, if you like. These are the absolute pillars that any government looking to build its regime and its framework should take into account.
A lot of the successful countries that have been able to bring increased quality of life to their citizens have built on those things. So I think it's about taking part in those discussions. They're very open, and they openly allow other countries to join and to share freely within that knowledge.
The reason I also think that's the better strategy is that every country is unique. Some of the remote kinds of issues that Afghanistan is going to face are very different from the kinds of issues Canada faces in our remote areas. We may not be able to simply say here's the recipe, why don't you photocopy it and paste it in your regime? They would benefit from other countries that have environments...that have other issues, that are in various stages of development. I think they can provide a lot of that expertise and assistance that would allow Afghanistan to try to build its capacity in a very uniform way.
Thank you for joining us, to our guests, and thank you for your presentation.
Has your department been asked to provide any assistance or lend any expertise to the Government of Afghanistan to help them with technical assistance or to assist in developing a mineral regime for their country? I did hear you say that you were asked—or somebody was here in 2008 and asked—and the only response seems to be that you've had some dialogue. I'm not criticizing you for that, but when you were asked by Mr. Obhrai about what particularly you could do, it seemed to be more of the same. I don't want to make too strong an analogy here, but we could tell the Afghan people, for example, that having a good education system will help them with economic and social progress, but that's not what they need. Are there any programs that you have? Are there any projects that you're undertaking here? Are there any hands-on things that you're doing or could do? I'm not saying that you haven't been asked to do them, that you don't have the mandate to do them, but we're looking at what it is that Canada could do to help the Afghans in the governance issues. For example, the Minister of Agriculture in Afghanistan happens to be an Afghan Canadian who develops a fair bit of his own expertise here in Canada, and he's actively working to help build a good agriculture system and whatnot.
We could suggest, for example, that the Government of Canada could help by having some expertise from your department or that you could bring together from other governments in Canada—because there's a lot of expertise around this country—to provide assistance to Afghanistan. I'll just give one example from the World Bank, which notes the long lead time for the development of a mine, the lack of support infrastructure, and the need for the Afghan government to develop effective revenue management and benefit-sharing policy: they are identifying the problem that they need to have a policy development. They need to work out some of these issues that you're talking about in terms of revenue and benefit sharing in order for this economic development to take place. And this is not old news; this is September 2010, so it's relatively current.
Is it possible that your department would be able to or be in a position to provide more than just the dialogue you're having with the ambassador and so on, to actually develop a program or project and say, okay, we have some people who are prepared to work in Afghanistan with you to help develop these policies, identify some of the roadblocks, etc.? Is that something that you think, if given the request from the Government of Canada, you would be able to provide?
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, Mr. Arora, for your presentation.
My son-in-law is one of those graduates of the great programs that Canada does have in the mining industry. He came as a foreign student from Ghana and was at Laurentian, which is where they met. He is going to be very pleased to hear about the availability of resources in Afghanistan. He is currently finishing his PhD and working with some rare earth elements, germanium particularly. He just spent $300 on a very tiny wafer to complete his project for NASA. So when I tell him the resources that are available in Afghanistan, I'm sure he's going to be very happy.
I was reading some of the same documentation I expect Mr. Bachand was referring to. The American publication, Businessweek, was saying they figure there are 1.4 million metric tonnes of rare earth elements in Afghanistan, for a total of $3 trillion worth of deposits spread throughout the country.
The Minister of Mines is quoted as saying:
The heavy rare earths in Khanneshin are found only in few locations around the world. This deposit could represent a long-term opportunity for Helmand province, creating jobs and stabilizing the area.
I refer to the opening of your presentation to us that talked about Canada as a country that has been able to translate resource extraction into lasting socio-economic benefits for its citizens. I wonder if you could expand on what you think that might look like for Afghanistan, knowing these deposits are there and that they recognize they're there.
If I may just bridge this, I had the opportunity to speak this morning with an organization doing micronutrients. They were talking with me specifically about the salt mines that are available in Afghanistan as well. Of course, there's a desperate need for iodized salt for the population to have a healthy life. They also say the salt can be fortified with iron as well to provide those micronutrients. What does that look like in the long term for the well-being of the Afghani people and the opportunities for jobs, well-paying jobs, and skills development? Can you comment on that?
Let me introduce myself. I'm very pleased to have the opportunity to speak to you today on my experiences in Afghanistan with respect to the minerals industry and the mineral potential of the country.
I'm speaking today on my own behalf, as a professional geologist with more than 30 years of professional experience, with graduate degrees in both geology and economics. I've worked in more than 80 countries over that time span, so I guess I've seen a pretty broad spectrum of various qualities of life, lifestyles, and mineral deposits as well.
I'm currently the executive vice-president for Hunter Dickinson Inc., which is a mining and exploration and development corporation based here in Vancouver. We've been around for more than 25 years, with operations on four separate continents and more than 6,000 employees around the world. Our largest operation in Canada is the Gibraltar mine in British Columbia, which is the second largest copper mine in Canada. We take great pride in achieving large returns in value to our shareholders.
I'm also here as the director of the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada, or the PDAC. The PDAC is a national organization comprising more than 7,000 members representing a range of companies and individuals in the mineral exploration and development industry. Our members include prospectors, geoscientists, environmental consultants, mining executives, students, people working in the drilling industry, financial and legal institutions, as well as the various other support industries that go along with mining.
The association's corporate members include junior mining and exploration corporations, major production companies, and organizations providing services to the industry. Our annual convention, which is coming up shortly, is the largest in the world, annually attracting about 25,000 people from all continents to Toronto.
I'd just like to give you a little bit of background on my perceptions of mining in Afghanistan and going forward from there to the mineral potential and so on.
Afghanistan, as you're well aware, has been a crossroads for trade and commerce over centuries, while in my perspective it was also a traffic jam or perhaps even a train wreck for geology. Virtually every continent bumped into that little country over the eras of geologic time, so that it's virtually a totally mountainous country that represents each mountain collision and continental collision over those ions.
We were there as Hunter Dickinson, as part of a tender process to evaluate and make an offer to develop the Aynak copper project, which is a world-class copper project in Logar province, about 40 kilometres to the southeast of Kabul. We were one of 13 companies from 13 countries that participated in this tender process, and we were the only Canadian entrant in this activity.
The approach we took was a fully integrated approach that brought together technical, environmental, and socio-economic programs. I personally built alliances with the EDC, the IMF, BCIT, Caterpillar, and the Aga Khan Foundation, among many others, in trying to put together a fully integrated package that would be beneficial not just to the mining project but to Logar province and ultimately to the entire country of Afghanistan.
Support was provided through the Canadian embassy--and was very much appreciated--as well as by receiving letters of support from Prime Minister Harper and a number of ministers to their counterparts in the ministry in Kabul.
One of the highlights was the facilitated meetings held with local community leaders--I guess you could say, if you go to the news media, they would be called warlords, but we call them community leaders--to inform them and increase their capacity for understanding what a mining operation might be in their region. When I went to them--and I met with 25 individual community leaders--they did not even have an idea that there was potentially a world-class mining opportunity being developed in their region, and they were very much surprised and were very appreciative of the fact that I laid out the entire program for them so they could have some comment.
On the mineral potential of Afghanistan, as I mentioned, it's the crossroads of geology as well as commerce.
In 2010 the U.S. Geological Survey put out a report, which you're certainly well aware of, that identified vast mineral wealth in the country. Those were broad estimates, in my perception. They would not conform in any way to a legal definition of mineral resources or reserves. They're meant to be guidelines for governments and public sector companies that might be interested in exploring developed mineral resources in the country, but by no means could they be used to develop a technical report that would be useful for corporate finance and that sort of thing.
Challenges to working in Afghanistan were manyfold. Logistics would be right at the top of the list. In fact, when I asked the community leaders how they would rank their most needed and desired components to a program that our company might implement in the area, it actually surprised me initially, but when I thought about it in retrospect, logistics was their top priority. They were looking for bridges and roads, so that they could better access their countryside and better access trade for and among their villages. Naturally, other things were improvements in farm capability, employment, and so on.
Other challenges for working in Afghanistan include cultural differences. Yes, a western culture is quite different from a central Asian culture, but again, it's cultures within cultures in Afghanistan, because of the normal tribal behaviour the people live under. We were looking at improving dramatically the skills and capacities of the people.
That's why I brought in groups like BCIT, who are ready to establish, essentially, a branch campus in the vicinity of the Aynak copper mine in order to train not just people for exploration and geology but also normal things like pipe fitting, electricians, mechanics, and so on. These are things that we believe not only could be useful at the mine but then could have impacts that would spread across the country as an amoeba might.
Energy would be a tremendous challenge in that country. Virtually all the energy is coal-fired or through diesel power plants on a relatively small scale. We were looking at having to probably build a coal mine in addition to a coal-fired power plant in order to make a mine like Aynak work.
Transportation, as I mentioned, was the top priority for the local people. Security goes without saying.
One of the things I was intending to provide right from the beginning was an employment program that would utilize the current skill levels of the people on site. If you're familiar, most everything is built on an adobe basis. I was intending to essentially create a compound encircled by an adobe wall, not so much to keep people out but in order to provide several thousand people with jobs for a couple of years. People would therefore see immediate impact by our presence in the country.
Then there was the need to just build mutual trust with the people. That's a challenge in its own right. I thought by going to the people the way we did—and we were the only company that went out into the countryside to meet with their community leaders—we could start building those hands across borders with them.
Mining is a contributor to the future of Afghanistan. My true belief is...comparing mining in Afghanistan, you might compare it to developing the infrastructure and economies of the territories and Yukon. Basically, there is not a lot of alternative economy out there. Yes, small-scale farming is available, but it's subsistence farming.
Similarly, the only way to bring in high-level skills, high-level technology, is through natural resource development. Bringing it in and bringing the people to the level that would be required for them to be the participants and leaders in that area were keys.
We had in mind, by year 10 of a mining operation at Aynak, that there would perhaps be less than five expatriates in Afghanistan running that mine. Everybody else would be brought up by the bootstraps and have increased capacity and education such that they would be running the mines.
How would I place the Canadian mining industry and government in developing Afghanistan's future economy? I'd look at it from a personal and future financial security basis. Establish security in the area and mining companies will come to Afghanistan. Without that, the risk to not only personnel but also to investment is just too high. Our exploration funds and our development funds are too few and precious to be able to gamble them in a fashion where there's not security of tenure and security of life.
It would be helpful to have political risk insurance should mining companies enter the country. Other incentives that I'm certain governments can come up with that are beyond my capability to suggest would also be things we would consider.
In summary, I'd like to say Hunter Dickinson viewed Aynak and the Aynak copper project as more than a technical and economic activity. We viewed our efforts there as the beginning of a country-building effort. A well-run mining operation in Afghanistan could form the foundation stone from which the first non-conflict, non-drug-related economy could be based in that country, and it could grow and spread across the country for many decades to come.
I thank you for your time.
:
My colleagues have stressed the lack of infrastructure. You mentioned it yourself, the lack of infrastructure for transporting minerals, for example. There are few railways, few bridges, few tunnels, and so on.
They also have relatively little training. You mentioned geologists trained in the Soviet Union during the occupation. I imagine there are very few people like that in the local population, so a company setting up there would seem foreign to the people, because there are very few local senior managers.
You also mentioned the lack of sources of energy and the need to develop them. You mentioned security problems, like taking two years to build a wall to protect a site. You mentioned cultural difficulties. We know that Afghan society is driven in general by considerations that are not economic; they are completely different in nature.
All in all, would a prospecting and development operation in Afghanistan not be something completely artificial and foreign to the country, and seen as such by the local population, hence the security threats? To be viable and safe, would such an operation not need measures beyond the ability of the country to pay? So it would be the west that would be paying to protect the operation. Aren't we dreaming when we talk about an operation like that?
If you had all the protection and infrastructures you need, maybe your shareholders would get large returns, as you said at the start of your remarks. It might pay off for your shareholders, but it would be extremely expensive for foreign countries, including Canada, who would, indefinitely, have to make sure the operation could function properly.
:
I would agree with you very substantially, particularly in the early years. I believe that the country itself would prosper from mine development with time. As I say, we had a 10-year timeline to essentially indigenize a world-class mining operation in Afghanistan and put it into the hands of Afghans. My belief is that, yes, with the existing engineering and geological expertise in the country, there's a basis or a foundation upon which to build. But it would take an exchange program to create more expertise and to bring them to the current levels needed to run the most efficient mine and the most efficient exploration activity.
In terms of logistics, access is probably on the same order of magnitude as access to explore in Nunavut or the Territories. Although it's very mountainous, the weather is not as harsh. At the same time, there's not a real road infrastructure. Therefore, a lot of helicopter use would be demanded and a lot of fly-in, fly-out airstrips as well.
In terms of gaining, I think I tried to emphasize the need to build mutual trust. Once a mine is developing and the people of the country realize that benefits are accruing to the local population and are starting to spread across the country, I believe that the exploration geologist will become a welcome visitor in many parts of the country. The Afghan people, by their custom, when a person knocks on their doors, are bound to protect them from any sort of danger. Therefore, yes, in the early years it could be very challenging, and there would probably be a need for military escorts to accompany small contingents of exploration geologists as they're exploring for new gold, copper, and iron mines, and so on. But again, with time, maybe a decade or a decade and a half, we're looking at a change in the way things would be approached.
I would compare it, in my mind, and I'm not trying to be funny, to the turn of the 19th to the 20th century, with the activities in western Canada or the western United States, with all the exploration for copper and gold and the dealing with the indigenous peoples there. There were lots of forts and lots of cavalry protecting the people who were living at the frontier. It would be very much the same now as it was then.