Canada Mining Corruption: Survey Finds Canadian Provinces Seen As Riskier Than Parts Of Africa

Canada Mining Corruption Fraser Institute Survey

The Huffington Post Canada   First Posted: 02/24/2012 12:55 pm Updated: 02/24/2012 12:59 pm

Corruption in Canada’s mining industry is worse than in some African and Latin American countries, says a new survey from the Fraser Institute.

Alberta, British Columbia, Quebec, Nunavut and the Northwest Territories all ranked in the survey as more corrupt than Chile and Botswana. The remaining provinces and territories ranked better than any developing country, but were still seen as more corrupt than many U.S. and Australian jurisdictions.

The study notes that Chile and Botswana have the fastest-growing resource sectors on their respective continents, suggesting a link between economic growth and lack of corruption.

The Northwest Territories ranked as the most corrupt in Canada, with fully 16 per cent of respondents saying corruption would keep them from investing in the area.

Sweden, Norway and Finland, as well as the U.S. states of Minnesota and Missouri, were ranked as the least corrupt in the survey that looked at 93 countries and sub-national areas and surveyed 802 mining companies worldwide.

Most of the developing world, and some developed countries such as Poland and Spain, ranked worse than any Canadian province.

It’s a surprising result that suggests some Canadian jurisdictions may have a way to go in ensuring confidence in their mining sectors, and it indicates that controversies surrounding Canadian mining companies may go beyond concerns about their operations abroad.

It’s clearly a concern, though a concern amongst a minority of miners,” survey co-ordinator Fred McMahon told the Globe and Mail. “I doubt there’s big money passing hands, but it might be a favour here or a favour there. … It’s something that plagues mining companies around the world.”

The report does not cite examples of corruption in Canadian mining. But concerns have traditionally centred around Canadian companies’ activities abroad. Mining firms have often been criticized for their links to resource-fuelled wars in Africa.

Bribery is seen as being among the most common problems. Last year, Calgary-based Niko Resources agreed to pay a $9.5-million fine after admitting it bribed a Bangladeshi government minister. Under Canada’s Corruption of Foreign Public Officials Act, it is illegal for Canadian companies to bribe officials anywhere in the world.

In another case, the RCMP raided the offices of Calgary-based Blackfire Exploration last year as part of an investigation into allegations the company bribed Mexican officials to suppress dissent against an open pit mine in Chiapas. In 2009, three men linked to Blackfire were arrested for the murder of an anti-mining activist.

This tragic outcome can be traced directly to the Harper government’s refusal to end the impunity currently enjoyed by Canadian mining companies,” Council of Canadians chair Maude Barlow said at the time.

But in a 2009 report on corruption in mining, Ernst & Young reported that heavy regulation may also be to blame. Mining is among the most heavily regulated industries in the world, and “as a result, officials who have the power to block, delay or frustrate a project may attempt to solicit bribes for the benign exercise of that power.”

The report also suggests that corruption may not be worth it, financially.

“The impact of such activities can seriously degrade a company’s share price and potentially trigger costly shareholder or other litigation,” the report stated. “Furthermore, the time spent by management in attending to investigations, press inquiries or regulatory processes can distract management from the business of developing or operating a mineral property, or exploring for new properties.”

Canada's mining sector was worth $54 billion to Canada's economy in 2010, amounting to 4.4 per cent of GDP.

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12:40 AM on 02/06/2013
"Alberta, British Columbia, Quebec, Nunavut and the Northwest Territories all ranked in the survey as more corrupt than Chile and Botswana." Out of 5 of those in Canada, 4 have strong environmental protection laws for their citizens. I would like to know on what basis they say those provinces are corrupt? is it that the environmental laws do not allow a business to maximize the profits in their pockets and maintain accountability to the business for the actions that they take within those provinces?
06:16 PM on 02/24/2012
Don't see how this is news to Canadians, unless they're so poorly educated and informed.
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08:23 PM on 02/24/2012
It's news to me. I am neither poorly educated nor uninformed. It just so happens that I don't know everything, which is why I read the news. There are things that I know that you don't, but I will never call you ignorant for it. So my question to you is, and I am truly curious, is there any particular reason that you felt the need to write that condescending comment?
08:26 AM on 02/25/2012
Re: "It's news to me. I am neither poorly educated nor uninformed."

Cleary you have low standards for what constitutes 'being informed'.
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nete peedham
08:40 PM on 02/24/2012
Yep, 'n yoo noo all about it...before it was even printed!
08:25 AM on 02/25/2012
How is it anybody's fault but your own that you have to be spoon fed your 'news' from your media?
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contest d
04:34 PM on 02/24/2012
These companies are also being whitewashed via foreign aid development projects. If a local Canadian NGO does not promote development that primarily benefits the mining company, their funding is cut, while NGOs that make the cut essentially become “public service contractors”.

http://www.opencanada.org/features/corporatization-of-aid/
04:17 PM on 02/24/2012
I would like to see a law enacted that would require any company doing or quoting surveys, to publish the questions asked by the surveyor and who was surveyed and where.
Surveys can be skewered to produce any answer you want if you ask the "right " questions, worded in the "right "way to the "right "people in the "right" circumstances.
Without knowing these details, surveys mean nothing.
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Skookum1
truth can't be bought, but lies sure can be sold..
04:22 PM on 02/24/2012
What struck me as odd here is that this is a Fraser Institute study - closely allied with the right, and in cahoots with the mining-industry and stockbroker cabal that drove the NDP from power....must be some discord in the right-wing backrooms right now, or the Fraser Institute is trying to launder itself of its neo-con associations and become a responsible research body. That being rather unlikely, something else is going on for the FI to even publish this, much less commission it in the first place....Michael Walker and Michael Campbell are not the type of people to criticize BC's, or Canada's, resource sector in any way....something else is behind this, don't know what yet. We'll see.....
05:24 PM on 02/24/2012
When you see smokeetter start looking for fire!!!! Look with what happen in the economy already we can ask ourselves if it`s not better now to bet against your own Country, you know , you say it`s no good but you tell your people differently.
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Rob Vann
Hope for the best,Plan for the worst,Take what cms
05:35 PM on 02/24/2012
My first thought also..had to double check the source. I don't question the accuracy.. what's the agenda? Northern Gateway?
04:15 PM on 02/24/2012
There should be an embargo against Canada!

After all, why should countries sell or buy anything from a country that allows such corrupt practices?
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Skookum1
truth can't be bought, but lies sure can be sold..
04:23 PM on 02/24/2012
Maybe they'll start a p.r. organization to rebrand their image/reality - EthicalGold.org maybe?
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Steve Lives
The Venus Project ... look it up
03:25 PM on 02/24/2012
As long as you have a monetary system, you have corruption. They are hand in hand. There is no getting rid of one without getting rid of both. Our society runs on corruption. Differential advantage is the base of our economic system. Why is anyone surprised about anything in this article?
03:49 PM on 02/24/2012
I certainly can agree with our comment. That said, I don't believe there has to be corruption. We will not get away from a monetary system so we must find a way to stamp out corruption .
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Steve Lives
The Venus Project ... look it up
04:09 PM on 02/24/2012
There is no way to stamp out corruption as long as we have a monetary system. Can't be done. I would be interested in an explanation on how this can be done. But we can get rid of the monetary system. Technology makes it possible, but peoples values have to change. Check out the Venus Project and the Zeitgeist Movement. A Resource Based Economy would have no use for money. No use for government. Crime would virtually vanish. Poverty, gone. If you have the time, watch Zeitgeist Moving Forward, which gives a pretty good explanation on how this would work.
http://www.thevenusproject.com/
http://www.thezeitgeistmovement.com/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Z9WVZddH9w - Zeitgeist Moving Forward
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Jay from Ottawa
sovereignty sale, 1.3T OBO
04:23 PM on 02/24/2012
I've long been a technocrat at heart :) Even as a child when I didn't even know what technocracy was.
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Skookum1
truth can't be bought, but lies sure can be sold..
04:34 PM on 02/24/2012
I remember in Silverhill BC (part of Mission) there was one house, architect-designed, very nice, that had this big red and white yin-yang sign, sort of like the Safeway logo, with the word "Technocracy" on it. I asked my Dad, who was an engineer, what it was and he said something to the effect that it was "like a religion, but he didn't trust them".
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Steve Lives
The Venus Project ... look it up
06:05 PM on 02/24/2012
The Venus Project is not quite Technocracy. But close I guess. In a Technocracy, it is proposed that a ruling elite of technically minded people control everything. These people don't exist in the Venus Project. In the Venus Project, everyone can contribute if they want. And have access to the education and resources needed to do so. The Resource Based Economy would be monitored entirely by cybernetics, not people. Its hard to explain in the limited space I have here, other than to say that all our real problems are technical in nature. Here is a short video with Jacque Fresco explaining how it could work.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIMy0QBSQWo
Not trying to argue Jay, just pointing out the difference between these two ideas.
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Bec DeCorbeau
Le langage de l'invisible est le silence
03:16 PM on 02/24/2012
I knew it! It's not only québec that have the worse corruption record. It's just that canadian outside of québec are just starting to realize it!
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Skookum1
truth can't be bought, but lies sure can be sold..
04:05 PM on 02/24/2012
Quebec has been used as a scapegoat by the national media. The most corrupt province, since its founding in colonial times, is easily British Columbia.....you don't hear about it because the media are part of, and support, the corruption.
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Gracie fr
05:10 PM on 02/24/2012
The Anglo scapegoating of Quebec may have something to do with the fact that French speaking Quebeckers are peceived as being "the other Canadians" by the English speaking majority....
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07:53 PM on 02/24/2012
None of the other anglo provinces cares about BCs reputation, I dont see a massive anglo coverup for the sake of BC.
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Murman
I read the news today, oh boy.
03:14 PM on 02/24/2012
is it really that shocking to know that corruption is rampant in ANY situation where there is lots of money to be had?
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Spanky McFarlane
ILLEGITIMUS NON CARBORUNDUM.
03:05 PM on 02/24/2012
.. & our current Government is a big part of the reason why:

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2011/10/31/mining-watchdog-agency.html
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JeanFrancois Lord
03:00 PM on 02/24/2012
Sadly this has all to do with business access to politiciens. it involves all parties (more some then others but...)
02:15 PM on 02/24/2012
Its too bad they don't give examples of the corruption in Canada. I wonder if corruption in Canada is apples-to-apples comparable to that in developing countries? Or if they considered all types of corruption equal?
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MoreFreedom
02:36 PM on 02/24/2012
Examples of corruption in "regulated" industries abound. Consider Warren Buffet's contributions to Obama and the Democrats. He made a lot of money on his Burlington Northern rail road stock, when the Keystone Pipeline was rejected, because instead of using a pipeline, oil will be shipped in tanker cars. Of course what Buffet did was technically legal. But it represents an economic business decision being made by politicians who are swayed by campaign cash, rather than allowing the free enterprise system to prevail. The opportunity for corruption on smaller projects in local governments is even greater.
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Mike vdB
Get involved, always question, don't just exist.
01:58 PM on 02/24/2012
Where there is money to be made over hand and fist....there will be some type of corruption. Ethics are like the Bible, it is all in how you interpret the words to your benefit.
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MoreFreedom
02:38 PM on 02/24/2012
Terrorists make money "over hand and fist" by selling opium and other illegal drugs. Is the corruption that government creates these laws to enrich the terrorists (perhaps to allow government officials to increase their budgets to fight drugs and terrorism)?
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Jay from Ottawa
sovereignty sale, 1.3T OBO
01:54 PM on 02/24/2012
Now cue in Katherine Marshall to remind us just how ethical we are compared the everyones else in the world.
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Glass Cannon
Let every eye negotiate for itself.
01:46 PM on 02/24/2012
In Canada we talk a lot about how upstanding, fair and ethical we are, and this is a fine ideal. But we need to pay more attention to those places and practices where we are not upstanding, ethical or fair and make it right. We can't afford to trust that our image or our sense of ourselves is really all that. One bad apple will spoil the barrel.
01:35 PM on 02/24/2012
Republicans and Conservatives are the MOST corrupt form of government on the planet and without checking any facts I would bet that's who's in charge of these provinces/states/countries. I will now go see if my statement rings true..
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MoreFreedom
02:48 PM on 02/24/2012
I think you mean they are the "most corrupt" rather than "most corrupt form of government" since our "form of government" includes Democrats who control the Senate and White House. And Canada's government includes liberals as well.

I believe government's role in commerce should be limited to dealing with disputes in the courts. It's "regulation" of commerce (prohibiting transactions among an otherwise willing buyer and seller) is what leads to corruption. It's no surprise that those trying to do business while the government puts up roadblocks, look for a way around them. The government hasn't made a dent in the illegal drug market, and they can't even keep drugs out of prisons. Every week guards get busted transporting drugs into prison.

The vast majority of transactions in commerce have no fraud associated with them. But it seems, liberals see corruption in the voluntary sector of the economy (if there's a profit - it's corrupt), while they see no corruption in the coercive sector of the economy where government is involved.
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nete peedham
08:26 PM on 02/24/2012
Horse manure...one cannot trust another to regulate themselves...no matter HOW many bible verses one quotes.
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MoreFreedom
03:13 PM on 02/24/2012
It occurred to me, where is the most corrupt local government in the US? That's likely Illinois and Chicago. Four of the last 8 governors went to prison, three of whom were Democrats. The evidence points to more corruption on the Democrat's side.
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Gracie fr
05:21 PM on 02/24/2012
You might consider Louisianna, birth place of Huey Long and along with Texas, the current hub of oil business and the BP spill,not to mention treatment post-Katrina of African Americans.....