The real costs of coltan mining in the DRC — report
Many cell phones and other electronic devices contain tantalum, which comes from the ore coltan (columbite-tantalite). The Congo produces more than a quarter of the world’s tantalum, the scarce mineral that’s extracted from coltan ore and used in Apple iPhones and other smartphones as well as armaments and aviation components. Societe Miniere de Bisunzu Sarl (SMB) is the Democratic Republic of Congo’s biggest coltan miner.
In 2021, the African country’s coltan production was estimated at 700 tonnes, making the DRC the world’s largest coltan producer.
Activists, journalists and scholars have found a relationship between coltan exploitation and large-scale environmental degradation, human rights abuses, violence and death, the Conversation reported.
A new study by Oluwole Ojewale, at Institute for Security Studies examines the impacts of coltan mining and trading on the environment and local communities in north-eastern DRC and poses the question: What can the DRC government and private sector do to ensure responsible sourcing of coltan?
Read the full report here.