Mining companies are snapping up claims to develop Indigenous land. But what happens when a nation doesn’t consent?

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“It seems pretty clear we need to get this part of it right,” says Jamie Bonham. “Without it, we will struggle to see the potential this industry can realize.”

Reconciliation isn’t the only thing threatened when mining exploration companies fail to get consent from Indigenous nations, says one ethical investor.

“It seems pretty clear we need to get this part of it right,” says Bonham. “Without it, we will struggle to see the potential this industry can realize.” Mining operations are fundamentally in conflict with B.C.’s Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, which incorporated the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples into B.C. law, Bonham says.

“So we do need a fundamentally different approach, and I think maybe sometimes you have to go slow, at first, to go faster,” Bonham says. Instead, Bonham thinks consent should be given at the exploration phase to create a strong foundation that doesn’t sprout conflict down the line for a project. “Enough companies have been burned now by buying projects that had a lot of problems with them that they're gonna be looking for ones that don't,” Bonham says.

“It's not an easy job to track them all down and get in touch with them and contact the community and help them respond,” Martin says.

 

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