The Certified Trading Chains (CTC) concept was first tested and piloted in Rwanda. BGR implemented the project from 2008-2011 in cooperation with the Rwanda Geology and Mines Authority (OGMR; subsequently incorporated as the Geology and Mines Department into the Rwanda Natural Resources Authority RNRA/GMD) from 2008-2011. The project mobilized local mining sector and downstream (smelter) participants on a voluntary base. Through the CTC pilot project in Rwanda, the feasibility and viability of the approach in an artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) context was successfully demonstrated for the first time. The CTC approach was further refined and developed as part of the process.
The project involved on-going stakeholder consultations steered through a national working group whose main members included OGMR, BGR and the Rwanda Bureau of Standards (RBS), working in close coordination with private participants. RBS also integrated the CTC standards into a national mining code of practice published in 2011. During project implementation, the CTC approach was adapted and optimized to manage initial challenges (e.g., with regards to the reproducibility of audit results). Indeed, it was found that integration of learning experiences, through on-going internal monitoring of the approach and concept as a whole, and flexibility in terms of formalized adaptations were the key for successful implementation.
Audits
Independent third-party baseline and compliance audits were performed at five Rwandan mineral producers who volunteered to participate in the project. After the initial round of baseline audits on individual sites, cross-cutting key areas for improvement among auditees were identified and external consultants were contracted by BGR to advise these auditees to catalyze the improvement process. It is important to note that, while guidance is offered as part of the CTC improvement concept, ultimately it is up to the auditee (and, ideally, its supply chain partners) to commit to and own the improvement process. Subsequent compliance audits documented systematic improvement among all auditees; three auditees were found to comply with the defined score to receive CTC certificates of compliance, valid for a period of three years. RBS issued these certificates in the frame of an international conference on due diligence and mineral certification, organized as part of the project in Kigali in March 2011 as one of the first such conferences in the whole region.
Average overall performance by individual mining companies for CTC baseline and compliance audits in Rwanda from 2009-2011
Source: BGR
Since 2012, there have not been any further CTC-related activities in Rwanda as the original pilot project had ended. However, certain aspects of the adapted CTC concept from Rwanda were integrated into the on-going project on mineral certification in the DR Congo. BGR has continued cooperation with RNRA in Rwanda under the framework of a regional cooperation program with the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR), focusing on implementation of the Regional Certification Mechanism and formalization of the ASM sector. Many original CTC-participating mining companies continue to score high in terms of regional due diligence efforts and responsible mining practice, and often provide an entry point for international stakeholders visiting the region.
Historical documents on the CTC pilot project in Rwanda can be found here.