Community & Communication


 

“Almaden believes that mineral development should both create wealth and foster lasting social benefits.”

—Duane Poliquin, Founder and Chairman


Transparency and Open Dialogue

Almaden has a long history of engagement with communities in the region around the Ixtaca project. Amongst many other initiatives, Almaden has trained and employed drillers and driller helpers from the local area, held nine large-scale community meetings totalling over 4,100 people, taken 480 local adults on tours of operating mines in Mexico, and held monthly technical meetings on a diverse range of aspects relating to the mining industry and the Ixtaca project. On December 9, 2018, Almaden hosted the most recent large-scale community meeting which was attended by over 800 people, including representatives of the new Federal Government in Mexico.

We believe in supporting the local communities within which we work. Over the years, Almaden has been involved in many large construction projects including building and improving schools, health care facilities, and roads.

We have also invested in smaller projects like purchasing school books and computers for students and wheelchairs for adults and children with mobility issues. Also, by employing local people, Almaden invests in local economies which keeps communities together and strong.

From training, employment, and scholarships to mine tours and open community dialogues, Almaden is committed to the local communities we work with and within. Below are some of our recent community projects.


Townhall Meetings

In December 2018, Almaden held its 9th large-scale community meeting to explain the Ixtaca Project to over 800 people. Almaden has held these large-scale meetings since 2012, and total attendance is now over 4,100 people. We are grateful to the representatives of the new Mexican Federal Government who attended this meeting, as well as to all of the local community members. We look forward to working together to continue laying the foundations for sustainable mining at Ixtaca!

 

Día de Muertos

Almaden recently participated in a Day of the Dead Festival, which was attended by approximately 250 people from four different communities. Almaden representatives, along with teachers in the communities organized a Day of the Dead play, as well as traditional dancing activities.

 

Community Consultation & Impact Assessment

In 2017, Almaden engaged a third-party consultant to lead a community consultation and impact assessment at the Ixtaca project. In Mexico, only the energy industry requires completion of such an assessment (known in Mexico as a Trámite Evaluación de Impacto Social, or “EVIS”) as part of the permitting process. The purpose of these studies is to identify the people in the area of influence of a project (“Focus Area”), and assess the potential positive and negative consequences of project development to assist in the development of mitigation measures and the formation of social investment plans. To Almaden’s knowledge, this is the first time a formal EVIS has been completed in the minerals industry in Mexico, and as such reflects the Company’s commitment to best national and international standards in Ixtaca project development.

The EVIS and subsequent work on the development of a Social Investment Plan were conducted according to Mexican and international standards such as the Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, the Equator Principles, and the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Due Diligence Guidance for Meaningful Stakeholder Engagement in the Extractive Sector.

Fieldwork for the EVIS was conducted by an interdisciplinary group of nine anthropologists, ethnologists and sociologists graduated from various universities, who lived in community homes within the Ixtaca Focus Area during the study to allow for ethnographic immersion and an appreciation for the local customs and way of life. This third-party consultation sought voluntary participation from broad, diverse population groups, with specific attention to approximately one thousand persons in the Focus Area.

This extensive consultation has resulted in changes to some elements of the mine design, including the planned construction of a permanent water reservoir to serve the local area long after mine closure, and the shift to dry-stack filtered waste management. The Company looks forward to advancing further elements of the community Social Investment Plan as mine permitting and construction advance.

 

Mine Tours

In 2016, Almaden hosted its 19th tour of mines in Mexico. So far 380 people from the local communities around Ixtca have visited modern mines. This last trip was particularly important, as members from Ixtaca and El Cobre came with us. It was a very successful trip.