Ministry receives $10M equipment for mining school

The Ministry of Natural Resources, on Wednesday, received equipment valued $10M, purchased with support from the United Nations Development Fund (UNDP), for the Guyana Mining School and Training Centre.

United Nations Resident Coordinator, Khadija Musa (left) handing over the equipment to Minister of Natural Resources, Raphael Trotman (Ministry of the Presidency photo)   
United Nations Resident Coordinator, Khadija Musa (left) handing over the equipment to Minister of Natural Resources, Raphael Trotman (Ministry of the Presidency photo) 
 

A release from the Ministry of the Presidency said that the equipment was secured as part of the Mainstreaming Biodiver-sity in the Mining Sector Programme, which was started last year. It includes: turbidity test kits, soil sieve sets, measuring cylinders, pipettes, ion meters, conical flasks and chemical flocculants.

United Nations Resident Coordinator, Khadija Musa said that this initiative is part of the wider Global Environment Facility programme through which the UN is working with Guyana to keep the country’s biodiversity intact.

Administrator of the Mining School, John Applewhite looks at some of the equipment. (Ministry of the Presidency photo)
Administrator of the Mining School, John Applewhite looks at some of the equipment. (Ministry of the Presidency photo)

“The important thing… in all areas of the environment is to ensure that skills capacity is developed so that the country can have [the] manpower it needs to monitor, verify and ensure that the right practices are being used,” Musa said, according to the release.

Minister of Natural Resources and Environ-ment, Raphael Trotman said that the project has three components; the first addresses illegal mining and non-compliance environmental regulations, the second looks at insufficient personnel and institutional capacity to enforce the regulatory framework and the third tackles the issue of insufficient capacity to implement the environmental regulations and codes of practices among miners.

“As we pursue our goal of developing the resources of Guyana; extracting and exploiting them, we will do so in a respectful and sustainable manner, respecting the environment and ensuring that after we would have finished… we would, to the best of our abilities, restore the environment to its original state so that future generations could benefit from it,” Trotman said.