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Mongolia

Advancing Extractive Industry Transparency (MN0057)

Overview

At-a-Glance

Action Plan: Mongolia Action Plan 2023-2027 (December)

Action Plan Cycle: 2023

Status:

Institutions

Lead Institution: Ministry of Mining and Heavy Industry

Support Institution(s): Ministry of Justice and Home Affairs, Ministry of Environment and Tourism, Ministry of Digital Development and Communications, 'Publish what you pay' civil society coalition, National Council of Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative Mongolia (EITI Mongolia National Council)

Policy Areas

Access to Information, Anti Corruption and Integrity, Beneficial Ownership, Extractive Industries, Legislation, Open Data, Private Sector

IRM Review

IRM Report: Mongolia Action Plan Review 2023–2027

Early Results: Pending IRM Review

Design i

Verifiable: Pending IRM Review

Relevant to OGP Values: Yes

Ambition (see definition): Low

Implementation i

Completion: Pending IRM Review

Description

What problem does the commitment aim to address? Natural resource activities, public control over revenue management and governance through transparency, increase accountability, and reduce the risk of corruption and conflicts of interest.

What are the causes of the problem? Mineral resources sector, particularly operational activities of state-owned companies, face high risk of corruption and conflict of interests. Irresponsible mining operations, environmental and human rights violations are influencing in unsupportive attitude towards mining, and becoming the source of misunderstandings and conflicts among local community and society. The implementation of the Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative, which has been successfully implemented by Mongolia since 2006, has clearly weakened in recent years due to the fact that the duties and responsibilities of the public and private sectors related to ensuring transparency are not guaranteed by law. Translucency in transparency and governance is reducing competitiveness and showing negative impact to the investment.

What has been done so far to solve the problem? Concept paper of the Law on the Extractive Industries Transparency has been approved. The Ministry of Mining and Heavy Industry drafted the Law on the Extractive Industries Transparency in 2020, however the draft was not submitted to the parliament. This is the third draft. The Ministry of Justice and Home Affairs additionally included the issue of ensuring transparency of other natural resources, such as land, forests, water to the minerals issues and amended draft to the Law on the Extractive Industries Transparency and currently receiving public comments on the draft.

What solution are you proposing? 1.The government will be responsible to implement corresponding activities to ensure transparency; 2.Legislate the composition and operation of an integrated database for the extractive industry transparency and link it to the state open database; 3.Define the functions of government institutions related to the formation of the database; 4.Ensure the transparency of the beneficial ownership in the extractive industry; 5.Ensure transparency of the contract; 6.The transparency of the National Wealth Fund activities, income and expenses shall be legalized; 7.Ensure transparency for state-owned legal entities operating in the extractive industry; 8.Determining the alternation of mineral and oil licensing areas, granting special licenses, signing contracts related to the use of natural resources, approving exploration results reports, technical and economic evaluations, and granting land and water use licenses, all decision-making process will be legislated to ensure transparency; 9.Establish civic engagement mechanisms to ensure transparency, determine industry policy, and monitor the implementation of law. 10. Complete activities to ensure transparency and clarify the financial sources. In determining national and local budgets, policies and regulations for the extractive industry, conditions will be created to oversee industry information, calculations, and research. 11. Determine the responsibility for the violation of the duty to ensure transparency.

What results do we want to achieve by implementing this commitment? State, local, private and mixed companies operating in the extraction and natural resources related activities, their contracts with subcontractors and financial information of supply and purchase shall be kept open and subject to public scrutiny. This will increase the profitability and benefits of projects in the natural resources sector.

Milestones | Expected Outputs | Expected Completion Dates

1.1.Submit the Law on the Extractive Industries Transparency for Parliament discussion. | -The law will be approved. -Unified database for the extractive industry will be created and open data will be compiled. | 2025

1.2.Clarify the functions and responsibilities of relevant government, state, local, private, and mixed companies in the field of transparency, and accustom to upload information related to its activities to the database in the form of open data; The information made public through the report of Mongolia's EITI is reported directly by the government agencies through their websites. | Government, state, local, private, and mixed legal entities will disclose relevant information openly. | 2024-2025

1.3.Funding for transparency implementation activities should be included in the state budget | The state budget will be approved, which includes the financing of activities for the implementation of transparency. | 2025

IRM Midterm Status Summary

Action Plan Review


Commitment 1. Advancing Extractive Industry Transparency

  • Verifiable: Yes
  • Does it have an open government lens? Yes
  • Potential for results: Substantial
  • Ministry of Mining and Heavy Industry, Ministry of Justice and Home Affairs, Ministry of Environment and Tourism, Ministry of Digital Development and Communications, Publish What You Pay, EITI National Council.

    For a complete description of the commitment, see Commitment 1 in https://www.opengovpartnership.org/documents/mongolia-action-plan-2023-2027-december.

    Context and objectives

    Proposed by the Open Society Forum and the Mongolian Natural Saving Fund, [1] this commitment aims to get the Extractive Industry Transparency Bill approved by 2025. [2] It also plans to establish an integrated extractive industry database and a government responsibility to allocate appropriate budget for extractive sector transparency activities.

    The extractive sector is central to Mongolia’s economy. The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) estimates that the industry contributes 25% of Mongolia’s gross domestic product, 30% of national budget revenue, 42% of investment, 57% of industrial production, and 90% of exports. [3] In addition to private corporations, the government also conducts its own mining operations through shares in mining companies, including the state-owned Erdenes Mongol LLC and its subsidiaries. A high level of corruption and weak transparency measures prevent Mongolia from enjoying the full benefits of its mineral resources, with the government incurring billions of dollars in debt. [4] While the government has introduced some pieces of anti-corruption legislation, they are insufficiently enforced and operationalized, and undermined by inconsistent data governance and disclosure practices, according to a U4 Anti-Corruption Resource Centre publication. [5] The 12.8 billion USD theft of coal exports in 2022, which led to weeks of mass protests, [6] further underlined the need for reform. Regarding EITI, as of 2022, it noted weaker multistakeholder oversight—attributed to a variety of factors, like the transfer of EITI’s secretariat from the Prime Minister’s Office to the Ministry of Mining and Heavy Industry (MMHI), strict COVID-19 lockdowns, and general constraints on freedom of expression and access to government processes. [7]

    Extractive industry transparency has been a consistent theme across all four of Mongolia’s previous action plans. Commitments in the first two action plans strengthened beneficial ownership transparency by disclosing extractive contracts and activities. [8] Subsequent commitments in the third and fourth action plans began working towards institutionalizing these reforms through development of an Extractive Industry Transparency Bill but did not pass it into law. [9] Altogether, IRM found that these commitments marginally improved extractives transparency with gaps in data verification, efficiency of the reporting mechanism, and public access to relevant information and databases. [10] Across action plan cycles, stakeholders considered passage of the bill to be an important enabler of extractives sector reform.

    Potential for results: Substantial

    EITI Mongolia National Council, Steps Without Borders, and Transparency International consider passage of the Extractive Industry Transparency Bill to be fundamental to transparency in the extractive sector, and a key step for anti-corruption. [11] The bill is expected to provide the legal basis for an integrated extractive industry database. To ensure compliance, it would introduce a ten-day limit for government agencies to provide specific data for publication on the database and a five-day limit to update existing data upon any changes. [12] It is expected to result in regular publication of currently unavailable extractive sector information and ease beneficial ownership reporting through automatic reporting. [13] The bill also aims to improve the legal framework for disclosing contract information, National Wealth Fund income and expenditure, and state-owned companies’ activities. This is of particular importance as the Minerals Law authorizes the government to take controlling interests in mining companies in line with its investment using public funds. [14] Furthermore, the intended corporate liability provisions also represent an important step toward stronger governance—as long as they include effective enforcement measures. The bill would also institutionalize a public participation mechanism in governing the extractive sector. The legislation would introduce provisions on mandatory compliance with the global EITI standard, allocate funding to support the EITI secretariat and activities, formalize civil society membership in the EITI National Council, [15] and transfer leadership of the EITI process from the MMHI back to the Prime Minister’s Office. [16] Key stakeholders noted this as one of the factors that had diminished government support for extractive transparency initiatives. [17]

    The commitment seeks to capitalize on momentum to get the bill passed. In the previous cycle, the MMHI completed a draft of the Extractive Industry Transparency Bill that was subsequently approved for submission to the parliament by a working group that included the Ministry of Justice and Home Affairs (MOJHA), the Ministry of Finance (MOF), and the Ministry of Environment and Tourism (MOET). [18] However, Parliament did not approve the bill by the end of the implementation period. [19] Government and civil society stakeholders attributed this failure to the MMHI’s lack of commitment to prioritizing the bill [20] as well as overarching privacy concerns. [21] The MOJHA took over responsibility for developing the bill in July 2022 and had published the draft on its website and organized consultation meetings with civil society during the previous action plan cycle. [22]

    Early into the implementation period of the current commitment, the Open Society Forum noted that the MOJHA was “very open to collaborate” and had already begun multistakeholder consultations on the bill. [23] It is important that stakeholders mitigate potential risks of the legislation continuing to stall, especially in anticipation of a political transition following the June 2024 parliamentary election. For instance, amending existing government resolutions on the EITI framework could provide an alternative pathway toward the reforms targeted by the bill. [24]

    Following passage of the bill, the commitment plans for early implementation. To establish an integrated extractive industry database, the commitment’s second milestone seeks to streamline intra-governmental coordination at all administrative levels. This would improve public access by collecting information that is not presently available and consolidating published data currently spread across different authorities’ platforms. This includes information on extractive licenses, rehabilitated land area, environmental protection expenditures, procurement and contracting data, land and water use permits, environmental and social impact assessments, environmental management plans and reports, and mineral exploration, production, sales, prices, revenues, taxes, royalties, and fees. [25] According to EITI Mongolia, the database will be managed by the EITI National Council; the MMHI will continue supplying information on mineral resources and the MOET will supply information on water, forest, wildlife, and plant resources. [26]

    The commitment’s third milestone guarantees government funding to support these transparency initiatives. EITI Mongolia expects this to address barriers stemming from understaffing and heavy workloads to maintain compliance with the EITI reporting mechanism and standard. [27] The Open Society Forum notes that this is especially crucial in fulfilling the 2019 Constitutional amendments’ mandate to utilize income derived from natural resources fairly and justly for the benefits of citizens through the Future Heritage and the Sovereign Wealth Funds. [28] Representatives of the MMHI and MOJHA as well as the Mineral Resources and Petroleum Authority did not reply to requests for comment on this commitment. [29]

    Opportunities, challenges, and recommendations during implementation

    Ten years since Mongolia’s first OGP action plan, this commitment has the potential to realize the long-sought goal of improved extractive sector governance. Passage of the Extractive Industry Transparency Bill would institutionalize many individual reforms that were introduced in prior action plans. These range from greater contracting and reporting transparency, participatory oversight mechanisms, and stronger information disclosure, which recorded some progress during implementation of previous commitments, but as yet lack consistency and sustainability due to the absence of a strong legal basis.

    However, potential political transition following the scheduled June 2024 parliamentary election could force relevant stakeholders to pivot from a legislative track. Failure to act swiftly could set the legislation back, in anticipation of new parliamentary leadership. To enhance implementation of this commitment, the IRM recommends:

  • Conduct a privacy impact assessment to harmonize the Extractive Industry Transparency Bill with existing information transparency laws, such as the Law on Official and State Secrets, the Law on Information Transparency and Right to Information, and the Law on the Protection of Personal Information. Such an assessment has been conducted in Canada, for instance, to identify privacy risks and develop mitigating measures. [30]
  • Closely consult representatives of the private sector (including state-owned enterprises) in refining and scrutinizing the bill’s provisions. Support from key actors in the private sector could move the bill higher on the government’s priority agenda and generate momentum toward cabinet and parliamentary approvals. In Nigeria, this approach helped address concerns raised by companies without compromising key principles of extractive sector transparency and privacy protection. [31]
  • Build and expand the existing EITI National Council’s multistakeholder process to convene wider government, private sector, and civil society stakeholders to oversee the governance of the extractive industry. The council could also develop a comprehensive participatory mechanism to conduct data verification and periodic refresh to increase the accuracy and reliability of the integrated industry database.
  • Design liability provisions that are weighted based on different levels and stages of compliance. Distinguish the application of administrative, financial, and criminal penalties between companies that have already disclosed beneficial ownership information but do not provide regular updates, and those that have not begun any disclosures. This would incentivize increased compliance.
  • Conduct awareness-raising activities and trainings on beneficial ownership transparency. Such initiatives could encourage greater public participation and uptake by journalists, for instance, to utilize public data to investigate corruption and illicit flow of funds. Established practices in the Slovak Republic [32] and Ukraine [33] provide strong references as to how these can be embedded in an OGP commitment.
  • Incentivize law enforcement agencies to use the integrated industry database in investigating and prosecuting corruption, money laundering, bribes, and criminal financing related to the extractive sector. In Indonesia, for example, law enforcement agencies’ use of the beneficial ownership registry helped build awareness and created greater demand for free public access to the database. [34]
  • [1] Bolorsaikhan Badamsambuu and Nominchimeg Davaanyam (National Committee for Human Rights), correspondence with IRM researcher, 11 Mar. 2024.
    [2] Open Government Partnership, “Mongolia: Advancing Extractive Industry Transparency (MN0057)” (accessed 11 Feb. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/mongolia/commitments/MN0057 .
    [3] Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, “Mongolia” (accessed 4 Feb. 2024), https://eiti.org/countries/mongolia .
    [4] Jorgelina Do Rosario and Karin Strohecker, “Mongolia Needs Mining Investments Ramp Up to Meet GDP Target - Finance Minister” Reuters (9 Jan. 2024), https://www.reuters.com/markets/asia/mongolia-needs-mining-investments-ramp-up-meet-gdp-target-finance-minister-2024-01-09 .
    [5] Bayar Dashpurev, “The ‘Coal Theft’ Case: Corruption and Reform of Mongolia’s Strategic Minerals Governance” (U4 Anti-Corruption Resource Centre, 27 Feb. 2024), https://www.u4.no/publications/the-coal-theft-case-corruption-and-reform-of-mongolias-strategic-minerals-governance .
    [6] Munkhchimeg Davaasharav, “Mongolians Brave Bitter Cold to Protest ‘Coal Theft’ Corruption” Reuters (8 Dec. 2022), https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/mongolians-brave-bitter-cold-protest-coal-theft-corruption-2022-12-08 .
    [7] EITI International Secretariat, Mongolia 2022 Validation Report (Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, 19 Jul. 2022) 5–6.
    [8] Open Government Partnership, “Mongolia: Develop Central Information Database of Minerals, Oil, and Land Tenure License Owners, Open to the Public (MN0004)” (accessed 11 Feb. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/mongolia/ commitments/MN0004; Open Government Partnership, “Mongolia: Ensure Transparency of All Agreements on Investment, Stability, and Production-Sharing of Public-Owned Resources Such as Water, Minerals, Oil, and Land (MN0005)” (accessed 11 Feb. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/mongolia/commitments/MN0005; Open Government Partnership, “Mongolia: Transparency of Contracts of Public Resource Exploiting (MN0032)” (accessed 11 Feb. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/mongolia/commitments/MN0032; Open Government Partnership, “Mongolia: Information Transparency of the Owners of the Entities with Rights to Use Mineral Resources (MN0033)” (accessed 11 Feb. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/mongolia/commitments/MN0033; Open Government Partnership, “Mongolia: Make Licenses, Information, and Activities of the Companies Transparent and Effective by Government (MN0034)” (accessed 11 Feb. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/mongolia/commitments/ MN0034 .
    [9] Open Government Partnership, “Mongolia: Beneficial Ownership Transparency (MN0044)” (accessed 11 Feb. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/mongolia/commitments/MN0044; Open Government Partnership, “Contract Transparency in Extractives (MN0045)” (accessed 11 Feb. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/mongolia/commitments/MN0045; Open Government Partnership, “Mongolia: Strengthening Extractive Industry Transparency (MN0048)” (accessed 6 Feb. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/mongolia/commitments/MN0048 .
    [10] Open Government Partnership, “Mongolia: Beneficial Ownership Transparency (MN0044).”
    [11] Tsolmon Shar (EITI Mongolia), interviews by IRM researcher, 5 Dec. 2021 & 2 Feb. 2022; Namsrai Bayarsaikhan (Steps without Borders), interview by IRM researcher, 14 Feb. 2022; Ilham Mohamed, Mariam Mathew, Losana Tuiraviravi, and Urantsetseg Ulziikhuu, “CPI 2023 for Asia Pacific: Regional Stagnation Marked by Inadequate Delivery of Anti-Corruption Commitments” (Transparency International, 30 Jan. 2024), https://www.transparency.org/en/news/cpi-2023-asia-pacific-stagnation-due-to-inadequate-anti-corruption-commitments .
    [12] Erdenechimeg Dashdorj (Open Society Forum Mongolia), correspondence with IRM researcher, 15 Mar. 2024.
    [13] Open Government Partnership, “IRM Action Plan Review: Mongolia 2021–2023” (21 Jul. 2022), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/documents/mongolia-action-plan-review-2021-2023 .
    [14] Dashpurev, “The ‘Coal Theft’ Case: Corruption and Reform of Mongolia’s Strategic Minerals Governance.”
    [15] Open Government Partnership, “IRM Action Plan Review: Mongolia 2021–2023.”
    [16] Tsolmon Shar (EITI National Council), correspondence with IRM researcher, 12 Mar. 2024.
    [17] Shar, correspondence.
    [18] Erdenechimeg Dashdorj (Open Society Forum Mongolia), interview by IRM researcher, 5 Oct. 2023; Mongolia EITI, Mongolia EITI 2023 Annual Report: Report for 2023 (Mongolia EITI National Secretariat, Dec. 2023) 3, https://eiti.org/documents/mongolia-2023-annual-progress-report .
    [19] Open Government Partnership, “Strengthening Extractive Industry Transparency (MN0048).”
    [20] Dashdorj, correspondence.
    [21] Shar, correspondence.
    [22] Ministry of Justice and Home Affairs, “Extractive Industry Transparency Bill” (2023), https://mojha.gov.mn/content/651fbaff99e06106c641f63a .
    [23] Dashdorj, correspondence.
    [24] Shar, correspondence.
    [25] Open Government Partnership, “IRM Action Plan Review: Mongolia 2021–2023,” 8.
    [26] Shar, correspondence.
    [27] Shar, correspondence.
    [28] Dashdorj, correspondence.
    [29] The IRM requested comments from the Head of Mining Policy at the Ministry of Mining and Heavy Industry, the Head of the Mineral Resources and Petroleum Authority, and the Acting State Secretary of the Ministry of Justice and Home Affairs via email correspondence on 5 January, 11 March, and 26 April 2024 but did not receive any responses.
    [30] Global Affairs Canada, “Privacy Impact Assessment for Extractive Sector Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Counsellor” (Canada.ca, 15 Aug. 2023), https://www.international.gc.ca/transparency-transparence/information-privacy-information-protection/assessment-evaluation/responsibility-responsabilite.aspx?lang=eng .
    [31] Sarah Dickson, “Philippines: Four Ways Beneficial Ownership Transparency Can Benefit the Extractive Industries and Beyond” (Open Government Partnership, 8 Apr. 2021), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/stories/four-ways-beneficial-ownership-transparency-can-benefit-the-extractive-industries-and-beyond .
    [32] Open Government Partnership, “Slovak Republic: Improvement of Beneficial Ownership Data Quality (SK0143)” (accessed 21 Feb. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/slovak-republic/commitments/SK0143 .
    [33] Open Government Partnership, “Ukraine: Beneficial Ownership Verification System (UA0061)” (accessed 21 Feb. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/ukraine/commitments/UA0061 .
    [34] Open Government Partnership, “Indonesia: Extractives Data Management (ID0092)” (accessed 31 Jan. 2024), https://www.opengovpartnership.org/members/indonesia/commitments/ID0092 .

    Commitments

    Open Government Partnership