Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative – Germany

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Resource extraction in Germany is diverse: What are the legal frameworks? Which payment flows do exist? How are human interventions in nature dealt with? This portal provides you with detailed information.

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Contribution of the German raw materials industry

  • What does EITI stand for and what does it have to do with raw materials?

    EITI stands for the global Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative’, which is committed to promoting financial transparency and accountability in the extractive sector and aims to fight corruption. Besides Germany, more than 50 countries implement the EITI standard and thereby disclose information including tax payments, licences and production volumes. Transparency is important because where information on revenues is disclosed, civil society actors and also parliaments can better understand the payment flows and thus prevent corruption and exploitation.

    Source (German): Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK) (2022:11). URL: Monatsbericht: Schlaglichter der Wirtschaftspolitik 10 · Oktober 2022 (bmwk.de) (retrieved on 07/03/2023)

    Dr. Franziska Brantner
    Parliamentary State Secretary at the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK) and Special Representative of the Federal Government for the Implementation of the EITI in Germany (D-EITI)

    © BMWK / Susanne Eriksson

  • What does EITI stand for and what does it have to do with raw materials?

    The Russian full-scale war against Ukraine has put security of energy supply in Germany and dependence on raw material imports in general at the top of the German government’s political agenda. The transparency and quality of imports of raw materials will therefore have to play a role in EITI reporting in future. This applies to the currently still necessary import of fossil energy raw materials. However, the successful energy transition will not reduce the need for other raw material imports in the future either. Germany must therefore ensure that imported raw materials are extracted in accordance with the same environmental, social and good governance standards that it applies to its own raw materials sector.

    Prof. Dr. Edda Müller
    Member of the Multi Stakeholder Group for Transparency International Deutschland e.V.

  • What does EITI stand for and what does it have to do with raw materials?

    The global EITI (Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative) is committed to greater financial transparency and accountability in the extractive sector. Germany has been a member since 2017. What is special about EITI is that the initiative is voluntary and the process is managed by a national multi-stakeholder group (MSG) consisting of representatives from federal and state governments as well as representatives from the private sector and civil society.

    All EITI validations to date have impressively demonstrated that all financial flows in the extractive sector of German industry are correct, plausible and traceable. A second important finding is that against the backdrop of growing global demand for raw materials and one-sided import dependencies, the importance of domestic raw material extraction is growing. It is carried out in Germany in accordance with the highest environmental, social and safety standards. Domestic extraction is not only lower in CO2 emissions than many imports, it also makes the industry politically less dependent on third parties.

    The dual transformation of the energy transition and digitalisation can only succeed with a secure supply of raw materials. Domestic raw material extraction makes a decisive contribution here.

    Matthias Wachter
    Member of the Multi Stakeholder Group for the Federation of German Industrie (BDI)

Recently updated reporting content

  • Security of supply

    Category:

    Sustainability in raw material extraction

  • Circular economy, in particular recycling

    Category:

    Sustainability in raw material extraction

  • Legal Framework

    Category:

    What are the legal frameworks?

  • Licences and contracts

    Category:

    What are the legal frameworks?

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