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Transcript of Strong
02/02/10
We are responsible mining corporation that discovers and processes natural resources for the
use of society.
MISSION
Outputs from National Wealth Share
• Day care services • Health and Nutrition Services • Education Services • Peace and Order Services • Solid Waste Management Program Services and
Clean and Green Program • Support to various livelihood programs • Indigent families • Capital outlays (infrastructure Projects – farm to
market roads, water systems, flood controls, multi-purpose buildings, slope stabilization, eco-tourism projects)
6/23/2012
...Philex is pro active in the field of environmental protection
• Community Based Reforestation was also started in the ‘60s as livelihood project (even before the “Man & Biosphere Program in the ‘70s)
• The first tailings pond was constructed in 1967 (even before the Pollution Control Law in 1976)
• ISO 14001 Certified even before DENR Adm. Order 14, Series 2003(PEPP) (Self
regulation toward Improved Environmental Performance
• Materials Recovery Facility was put up in 1998 even before RA 9003
Ecological Solid Waste Management Act of 2001
6/23/2012
Water Quality Management
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
Tailings Impounding System & Dam Stability Monitoring
TP#3 (Active)
Sedimentation Control
Alang Cut Silt Pond
Settling Pond for Assay Lab
Water Quality Management
Philex Orebody
Residential Area
Tailings Pond No. 1
Mill Plant
Tailings Pond No. 2
Tailings Pond No. 3
Water Quality
Sampling Points
Agno River
EFFLUENT MONITORING
6/23/2012
…and Multi-Partite Monitoring Team of MRF Committee
…by In-house…
…external Consultants
…Tailings Ponds are continuously monitored...
6/23/2012
Air Quality & Noise Management
Ambient Air Quality Monitoring
Administration Office Mill
Poro Point Installation
6/23/2012
Air Quality & Noise Management
Scrubber at Assay Lab
Compressor Area
Machine Shop
Used Oil & Fuel Management
Oil-Water Separator Oil Storage with Catchment Pond
Sludge Pond Used Oil Containment
6/23/2012
Chemical & Hazardous Materials Management
Assay Bodega 1425 Bodega
HazWaste
Bodega At
Hospital
6/23/2012
Solid Waste Management
Tailings Pond No. 2 Sanitary Landfill Facility – Category 1 Project
Fabricated Garbage Depository Bins Metal Chips at Depository Area
Watershed Management
Total area reforested to date: 2,210 hectares with more than 7million seedlings
Average AnnualCost (2006-2011) : P 4.0 million
Watershed Management
Midway Area to Compressor Aggregate Area to Mill
Midway Area to Bumolo Midway Area to Banget
Firebreak / Grasscutting
6/23/2012
Slope Stabilization and Erosion Control
Rip-Rapping at High School Area
6/23/2012
Slope Stabilization and Erosion Control
Benched Areas along Philex-Kias Provincial Road
Nagawa
1992
Sta. Fe
1996
2006
25 hectares P2million (1999-2002)
6/23/2012
REHABILITATION OF TAILING POND NO. 1
…before
…1998
…1999
…2000
… today
6/23/2012
Total Environmental Expenses
Environmental Expenses (Pesos)
Mine & Milling Cost
(Pesos) %
Jan. – Dec. 2011
1967 - 2010 3.09B
171M 3.7B
55.44B
5
6
Annual Average Environmental
Expenses:P110.6M (2000-2011)
…and they enjoy the following basic services for free: HOUSING, EDUCATION, HEALTH CARE, ELECTRICITY, WATER, TRANSPORTATION, TELECOMMUNICATION, PLACES OF WORSHIP & RECREATION FACILITIES
The Main Camp: A home to 14,000 people of various ethnic and cultural backgrounds
PRE-PROGRAM CONDITION INPUT OUTPUT
1. Inadequate health services, nutrition, sanitation, education and housing
2. High incidence of health problems and diseases due to lack of awareness, negligence, vises and improper diet
3. Health centers lack trained personnel; lack of training of BHWs to handle cases
4. Geographic features – difficult terrain / access to health services
5. Some households have no access to potable water and sanitary toilets
6. Socio-economic condition of the family thus can not afford health services
7. Not practicing family planning
Php 9.5 Million for Health
Care Programs / Projects / Activities
- 6,528 patients served
during medical missions
- 42,200 patients served
at Sto. Nino Hospital
- 188 first aiders trained
- 104 BHWs trained
- 391 residents attended
health awareness
seminar
- 259 households
provided sanitary toilet
bowls
- 6 health centers
assisted
- 124 residents trained on
herbal plant preparation
- Improved access / road
networks
- 11 public CRs with
septic tanks constructed
IMPACTS • Improved community health due to adequate and access to
health services (health centers, paraphernalia, equipment) • Increased awareness on causes of diseases including family
planning • Increased access to potable water • Access to sanitary toilet bowls • Reduce child mortality • Improved maternal health • Reduced occurrence of diseases • Empowered women • Trained health personnel • Savings on health services used for other basic needs
PRE-PROGRAM CONDITION INPUT OUTPUT
1. Poor quality of education due to lack of facilities such as books, instructional materials, fixtures and others
2. Dilapidated teachers quarters and school facilities
3. Poverty thus cannot afford to go to school
4. No opportunity for higher education
5. Lack skills in 3Rs 6. Disinterested to go to school 7. Lack of day care centers / no
preschool services available 8. Lack of secondary schools 9. Among young ages 13 – 16
years old – there is lack of interest, large family size, early marriages, failure to pass government examinations
Php 39.42
Million
Education
P/P/A
- 11 public ES adopted with 1,315 pupils
- 3 public HS adopted with 300 students
- 16 classrooms constructed /
rehabilitated benefiting 664 pupils
- 24 college graduates
- 595 student grantees under SPES
- 191 Learners under ALS Program
- 22 PIMQ Scholar graduates
- 8 units teachers quarters constructed
benefiting 29 teachers
- 3 units Home Economics constructed
benefiting 170 students
- 3 units Pre-school buildings benefiting
70 preschoolers
- 2 school clinics constructed benefiting
95 pupils
- 27-college, 30 Tech-Voc; 36 High
School, 167 elementary per year
- Graduates since 2003: 100 Elem; 67
HS and 23 College; 123 Tech-voc; 97
ALS
IMPACTS 1. Improved quality of education
2. Increased access to education (Primary to Tertiary Levels)
3. Increase interest of students to study / increased enrolment rate
4. Increased performance of pupils / students 5. Poverty reduction 6. Increased literacy rate 7. Increased employability of graduates that
require educational requirements and professional licenses
8. Social and human capital formation
PRE-PROGRAM CONDITION INPUT OUTPUT
1. A majority of the population lives below the thresh hold level
2. Significant number are not gainfully employed
3. Poverty remains the major problem, which may be due to lack of employment opportunities, lack of infrastructure supports such as farm to market roads, irrigation systems and limited access to credit facilities
4. Very low household income 5. Pest and plant diseases 6. Inadequate financial resources and
materials to start livelihood projects 7. Low employment rate 8. Passiveness among some
stakeholders 9. Lack of educational qualification /
underemployment, lack of technical assistance / training; not physically fit; no landholding or properties
10. Large family size to support
Php 18.6 Million
LIVELIHOOD
P/P/As
1. 13 livelihood associations / cooperatives organized / assisted with total membership of 455
2. 32 trainings (skills, capability building, strengthening and enhancement trainings) conducted attended by 818 participants
3. Employment generated by SDMP Infrastructure
4. Average of 100 Trainees under WAP every year. Total grantees is 598 trainees since 2001 to present
IMPACTS 1. Poverty reduction
2. Increased productivity of farmers
3. Increased income of families
4. Increase population mobility and access to economic and social activity and information
5. Improved peace and order
6. Formation of Community Assets
7. Human and social capital formation
8. Increased employability of graduates that require professional licenses
PRE-PROGRAM CONDITION
INPUT OUTPUT
1. Lack of infrastructure support
2. Have roads but needs improvement /rehabilitation
3. Need for footbridges due to terrain
4. Need for electrification
5. Low production among farmers due to lack of irrigation systems / water systems
Php 148
Million
Infra-
structure Projects
- 85 Water system and
waterworks development
projects, 10 projects as of 2010
(2nd SDMP)
- 27.9 kms* Farm to market road
concreted
- 90 Building (schools, churches,
multi-purpose, cooperatives,
CRs, ) Construction,
rehabilitation or improvement
projects,
- 877 m* hanging bridges
constructed
- 1,500 sqm. fishpond established
- Constructed primary power lines
* - Aggregate Number
EXPECTED IMPACTS
1. Poverty reduction; Increase farm productivity; increase family incomes
2. Formation of community assets
3. Increase access to social services and to economic and social activity
4. Increase population mobility
5. Increase knowledge on infrastructure
6. Increase access to basic services
80.80