SOURCE:Newmont Mining Corporation
DESCRIPTION:
“Building a healthier, safer and more environmentally sound and socially responsible business is embedded in our long-term business strategy and our values,” said
Newmont’s 2016 sustainability highlights include the following:
- Experiencing no fatalities at any Newmont site or facility during the year and reducing the number of serious injuries by 75 percent;
- Generating
$5.8 billion in economic value throughout our operating regions, including$1.3 billion in wages and benefits, nearly$400 million in taxes and royalties and$16 million in community investments; - Collaborating with federal and state agencies in
the United States on an unprecedented agreement governing our management of more than 1.5 million acres of sagebrush habitat inNevada ; - Advancing the Company’s human rights strategy through human rights impact assessments, a new artisanal and small-scale mining engagement strategy, and an independent study related to free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) of indigenous peoples;
- Implementing a Supplier Code of Conduct that commits suppliers to ethical, safe, and socially and environmentally responsible conduct; and
- Being named, for the second year in a row, the mining industry leader on the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index (DJSI), and achieving both Gold Class and Industry Mover distinctions in RobecoSAM’s 2017 Sustainability Yearbook, which is based on the assessment used to determine the DJSI scores.
The report also discusses challenges Newmont addressed during the past year including:
- Maintaining one of the lowest injury rates in the industry but falling short of the Company’s goal to further reduce injury rates, and missing targets to increase aboriginal hiring at one site and complete water management action plans at two others;
- Publishing the findings of an independent examination of the issues associated with a complex land dispute between the Company’s Yanacocha operation and the Chaupe family in
Peru ; and - Updating the reclamation plan for Yanacocha, which resulted in a significant increase in the Company’s estimated future closure costs.
The report, which was compiled in accordance with the Global Reporting Initiative’s G4 Core option and independently assured, reflects Newmont’s reporting obligations as a founding member of the International Council on Mining and Metals (ICMM) and as an early adopter of the UN Guiding Principles Reporting Framework, the first comprehensive guide for reporting on human rights risks.
The full report is available at www.beyondthemine.com.
Newmont values feedback on the report and the Company’s sustainability performance, and invites readers to complete a confidential online survey.
Tweet me:Go #BeyondTheMine & learn about @Newmont's 2016 #sustainability performance: www.beyondthemine.com
Contact Info:
Omar Jabara
Newmont Mining Corporation
+1 (303) 837-5114
omar.jabara@newmont.com
KEYWORDS: Research, Reports & Publications, Corporate Social Responsibility, Beyond the Mine, responsible mining, global reporting initiative, Newmont Mining Corporation