The Philippines is going all-in on transition minerals and endangering Indigenous lands

A new report reveals the violent cost of the green transition.

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The island of Mindanao in the Philippines is ringed by beaches and covered in volcanoes and gardens of exotic orchids. Mindanao has been home to the Indigenous Lumad peoples for centuries, but beginning in 2026, the island will become the site of the Philippines largest mining project. The Tampakan Copper-Gold Project has been in the works since large gold reserves were confirmed in the 1990’s, and since its inception, there has been intense Indigenous resistance.

Kat Dalon is one of those people working to stop the mine. Dalon has been fighting to stop the mine for most of her life. Today she writes and organizes to stop the project.



”We will realize our right to practice self-determination,” she said. A new report from Global Witness, an international human rights advocacy group, says that increasing demand for transition minerals necessary for green energy are putting Indigenous peoples, like the Lumad, as well as critical biodiversity in the Philippines, at risk. More than a quarter of lands in the Philippines identified for mineral mining overlap with biodiversity hotspots while nearly half of all mining permits issued by the state “clash” with important ecological zones.

Since 2010, Global Witness estimates that nearly 800 miles of critical forest lands have been lost to mining – an area around three times the size of New York City. Hannah Hindstrom, a senior investigator at Global Witness, says that a fifth of the land in the Philippines is already covered in mining leases. “It’s quite a shocking figure.

It’s a heavily mineral-developed country,” she said. “The Government has strongly signaled that it is open for business in the mining sector and they are trying to position the country as a leading producer of transition minerals.” Grist thanks its sponsors.

Become one . To support our nonprofit environmental journalism, please consider disabling your ad-blocker to allow ads on Grist. Here's How The Philippines is one of the most mineral rich countries in the world, and is the second largest global producer of nickel.

It’s estimated that only 5 percent of the nation’s 1 trillion dollars worth of minerals has been explored. As the world moves from fossil fuels to green energy solutions, like electric vehicles, minerals including nickel, copper, gold and silver are critical to building energy infrastructure and the Philippines is positioning itself to be a major economic player in the global mining industry. It’s estimated that by 2040, the global need for renewable energy will increase seven-fold.

But that move away from fossil fuels has put Indigenous peoples at the frontlines of land theft and business-driven violence. The United Nations Peoples Forum on Indigenous Issues has made many recommendations over the years, repeatedly pointing out that clean energy projects impede on Indigenous peoples’ right to free, prior and informed consent, as outlined in the United Nations Declaration on the Roghts of Indigenous Peoples . As well, Indigenous experts and advocates have called carbon markets “false climate solutions” and encourage countries to instead entrust land stewardship to Indigenous communities who have done so to great success for thousands of years.

In 1997, the Philippines passed the Indigenous Peoples Rights Act . The act, which is aimed to protect ancestral, Indigenous lands, has provided Indigenous peoples land titles to nearly 5 million hectares of homelands since 2020. But it’s an expensive and lengthy process that has taken as long as 20 years to complete, and an estimated 80 applications are still waiting to be processed.

Because of the bureaucratic burden, Indigenous peoples have accused the government of undermining and manipulating the process to further extractive business interests. The Department of Environment and Natural Resources, or DENR, in the Philippines is looking at shortening the mineral leasing time from six years, to one year. According to Global Witness, since the 1990’s, Indigenous peoples have lost around 60,000 square miles, an area roughly the size of the state of Georgia.

That development has put many Indigenous people face-to-face with violence. In the last decade, one-third of environmental land defenders killed in the Philippines were Indigenous, and nearly half of those cases were associated with mining. Hindstrom said that the country is consistently ranked as one of the most dangerous in Asia for environmental land defenders.

“Where there was a high rate of overlap between mining and Indigenous land, there’s also a high rate of killings of Indigenous defenders and especially, obviously, anti-mining defenders.” Grist thanks its sponsors. Become one .

To support our nonprofit environmental journalism, please consider disabling your ad-blocker to allow ads on Grist. Here's How Global Witness reports that the Filipino military, which is mandated to protect state resources, have close ties to mining operations and are linked to around half of the killings of Indigenous land defenders. Kat Dalon says that if small-scale mining could help benefit the country, Sabokahan Youth would support it.

She says as long as everyone is able to feed their families, protect the land, and share harvests, there may be a different conversation–but that’s not what’s happening now. “The point,” she said, “is that our lands, and what happens to it below and above the soil, should be under our self determination as its stewards.” A message from Grist is the only award-winning newsroom focused on exploring equitable solutions to climate change.

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Grist is the only award-winning newsroom focused on exploring equitable solutions to climate change. It’s vital reporting made entirely possible by loyal readers like you. At Grist, we don’t believe in paywalls.

Instead, we rely on our readers to pitch in what they can so that we can continue bringing you our solution-based climate news. Donate now and your gift will be TRIPLED!.