Mineral Certification in Rwanda
ASM Nyakabingo, Rwanda
Source: BGR
Starting in the 1930s when exploration and exploitation activities were dominated by Belgian investors, Rwanda’s mining sector has a long-standing history of private and public management (partly being nationalized from the 1970s until the 1990s). It has recently been re-privatized, with on-going efforts by the government to establish and refine the associated policy and regulatory framework (e.g., through the new Mining Code of 2014). The sector plays an increasingly important role in the national economic and development framework. In its current second Economic Development and Poverty Reduction Strategy (EDPRS II), the Rwandan government identifies the mining sector as one of the selected priority areas to facilitate economic growth and fight poverty.
Geologically, Rwanda forms part of the Kibaran metallogenic province further encompassing the eastern DRC, Burundi, southern Uganda and western Tanzania. Mining in Rwanda is almost exclusively focused on the 3Ts (tin, tantalum and tungsten ores); it mostly takes place through semi-formalized artisanal activities currently employing ca. 35,000 miners in total, with >200,000 livelihood dependents (ca. 2% of the population). More than 200 companies and cooperatives (most of them small-scale producers) are registered and more than 500 active mining and exploration permits have been issued by 2014.
Mineral Exports
Smuggling Risks