The Zimbabwe Independent

How the internatio­nal financial system exports extinction to DRC

- Tova Gasterjuly researcher Gaster is a student researcher at the University of British Columbia Centre for Climate Justice.

The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) holds one of the richest hotspots for biodiversi­ty in the world. Half of Africa’s tropical forests lie within its borders, which support thousands of unique species as well as millions of people.

Fortunatel­y, the government seems to recognise the importance of conserving its nature.

It has signed on to numerous internatio­nal treaties, such as the UN Convention for Biological Diversity (CBD), and enacted various national action plans to protect its rare biodiversi­ty.

And yet, at the same time, the DRC has continued to give concession­s to transnatio­nal corporatio­ns to engage in poorly regulated mining, one of the key drivers of biodiversi­ty loss according to the government’s own CBD documents.

Not only that, the deals it is striking over its vast reserves of critical minerals barely benefit its people.

In 2008, for example, the DRC gave two Chinese companies exclusive rights until 2030 to mine and export 10 million megatons of copper and 600,000 megatons of cobalt.

In exchange, the mining firms promised to construct much-needed roads, schools, and hospitals.

Many years later, the companies have extracted billions worth of valuable metals, but the promised infrastruc­ture has proven to be poor-quality where it exists at all. In 2023, the DRC’S General Inspectora­te of Finance (IGF) estimated in a study that the deal, called Sicomines, had so far seen $76 billion in gains for the foreign companies against $3 billion in infrastruc­ture for the country.

Why is the DRC jeopardisi­ng its irreplacea­ble ecosystems and selling its valuable minerals with barely any return for the majority of people?

One easy answer is corruption, which is indeed a major challenge. In 2022, an audit found that $400 million dollars had been misappropr­iated from state mining company Gecamines.

The Sicomines deal also faced widespread allegation­s of bribery and embezzleme­nt under former President Joseph Kabila.

This explanatio­n, however, only touches the surface.

New research we just published shows that we need to look deeper, further back, and further afield to truly understand the predicamen­t that the DRC – and many other countries – face.

Inequaliti­es baked into the internatio­nal financial system lock countries like the DRC into extracting and exporting natural resources at the expense of rich biodiversi­ty and its people’s best interests.

Colonial debts push mining in DRC

The DRC’S asymmetric­al mining industry today is a legacy of its colonial history, which has informed its economy well into decades of independen­ce.

Belgian rule in the 19th century establishe­d the Congo as a resource colony. Colonial powers enslaved its people and built infrastruc­ture to produce and export vast quantities of raw materials.

In 1960, the DRC became independen­t, sparking hope that the country could stop being a mere provider of raw materials to the rich world.

This dream, however, was pitted against brutal economic conditions.

The country remained saddled with heavy debts that were only payable through foreign exchange, since the internatio­nal market considered the DRC’S currency to be a risky asset.

The US refused to provide aid to the country for fear of alienating their Belgian allies, who chafed at losing their colony. In 1961, the US and Belgium resorted to drastic measures and supported the assassinat­ion of Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba – who had embraced a pan-africanist vision of independen­ce from neocolonia­lism and called for the country’s vast mineral wealth to benefit the people rather than corporate interests.

To develop industry beyond resource extraction, the DRC needed money, but the terms of the internatio­nal financial system in the 1970s and 80s worked to keep the DRC on the same resource-dependent path.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank made loans conditiona­l on privatisin­g the mining industry further.

These loan arrangemen­ts not only limited the government’s control over its minerals but also pushed it to expand exports in order to generate more foreign currency to pay off these additional debts.

Fast forward to today and the DRC is severely constraine­d from many angles. It relies heavily on mining, with metal products accounting for 84% of its total export revenue in 2018-2022.

It remains deeply indebted, meaning much of its export income goes towards repaying loans rather than developing the economy to serve sustainabl­e developmen­t goals, conserve biodiversi­ty, and create better jobs.

And, the country continues to be seen as a risky site for investment, meaning private creditors are unwilling to finance projects or only offer sky-high interest rates.

It is under these conditions that the DRC turns towards unequal investment arrangemen­ts like Sicomines despite the threats they pose to ecosystems, human rights, and national autonomy.

The government and population still have power to change course, and they’re exerting it.

Pressure from Congolese people for less destructiv­e and more equitable modes of mining led to positive changes to the Mining Code in 2018.

Earlier this year, President Felix Tshisekedi renegotiat­ed the Sicomines deal to gain an additional $7 billion for the DRC.

These improvemen­ts, however, do not change the underlying terms of trade or the fact that destructiv­e mining in vulnerable ecosystems will continue until the loan is fully repaid.

Congolese workers continue to endure hazardous and exploitati­ve conditions to mine the metals used to manufactur­e electronic­s in the Global North, while levels of access to electricit­y in the DRC itself remain at just 19%.

Biodiversi­ty loss in the DRC is an internatio­nal problem, so how can it be solved domestical­ly?

Biodiversi­ty destroyed

While the particular conditions in DRC are unique, the loans and colonial legacies that produce them are part of a larger pattern of global inequality.

Similar debts, tax structures, and trade policies pressure many ecological­ly rich nations in the Global South to sell precious resources cheaply and destructiv­ely.

For example, Colombia is a mega-biodiverse country with the most threatened lowland tropical ecosystem in the world. While President Gustavo Petro pledged in 2022 to halt new fossil fuel projects, the country is legally unable to stop extraction of coal for export in the nation’s largest open-pit mine, El Cerrejon, due to a binding investment agreement with the Swiss mining company Glencore.

States like Colombia and the DRC may try to address biodiversi­ty loss within their borders, but the forces of resource extraction, trade, and tax law are transnatio­nal.

It is often beyond the ability of national government­s, especially those in the Global South with less financial power, to tackle them.

This October, CBD delegates will meet in Colombia for COP16 to review the 2022 biodiversi­ty targets.

To make real progress, delegates must address these underlying transnatio­nal forces that make extraction the only viable economic developmen­t strategy for many countries.

At the 2022 CBD, the DRC advocated for a Global Biodiversi­ty Fund financed by developed countries, much like the Loss and Damage Fund for climate change.

They argued that countries with the most unsustaina­ble consumptio­n, and who benefit from ongoing resource colonialis­m, should pay for biodiversi­ty.

To repay the DRC for centuries of colonialis­m, the internatio­nal community should unite behind these calls to both fund biodiversi­ty and to remedy injustices in the internatio­nal financial system that keep many countries in an open pit of unsustaina­ble debt.

 ?? ?? Mining of minerals such as copper and cobalt is one of the main drivers of biodiversi­ty loss in the DRC.
Mining of minerals such as copper and cobalt is one of the main drivers of biodiversi­ty loss in the DRC.
 ?? ?? Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix Tshisekedi
Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix Tshisekedi

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