ECONOMY, ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT | |
ArticleName | Project approach to benefit sharing during industrial development of the Russian Arctic |
DOI | 10.17580/em.2023.01.06 |
ArticleAuthor | Potravny I. M., Chavez Ferreyra K. Y., Novikov A. V. |
ArticleAuthorData | Plekhanov Russian University of Economics, Moscow, Russia: Potravny I. M., Professor, Doctor of Economic Sciences, ecoaudit@bk.ru
University of Gabriel Rene Moreno, Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia: Chavez Ferreyra K. Y., Assistant, Candidate of Economic Sciences
State University of Land Use Planning, Moscow, Russia: Novikov A. V., Associate Professor, Candidate of Economic Sciences |
Abstract | The article addresses the issues of the project approach to interaction and harmonization of interests of mining business, indigenous people and local authorities during industrial development in the Arctic. The projects of gold extraction from mining waste, disturbed land reclamation, removal of gold refinery tailings storages and construction of tundra roads for the local population using the processed waste are substantiated as a case-study of the Kular gold field in Yakutia. The ecological, social and economic criteria are proposed for the efficiency evaluation of the projects and selected combinations of their financing charts. The implementation of the proposed projects can enable accumulated waste management, use of secondary raw materials in road construction, reclamation of mining-disturbed land and its return to the indigenous people for deer breeding and hunting, as well as removal of hazardous waste of a gold refinery. The study was supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research, Project No. 21-510-22001: Governmental Regulation of Environmental Protection and Subsoil Use Management in France and in the Russian Arctic. |
keywords | Mining industry, Kular gold field, interaction of parties concerned, Arctic, Yakutia |
References | 1. Burtseva E., Sleptsov A., Bysyina A., Fedorova A., Dyachkovski G. et al. Mining Industry of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) and Problems of Environmental and Social Security of Indigenous Peoples. Land. 2022. Vol. 11(1). DOI: 10.3390/land11010105 2. Berman M., Schmidt J. I. Economic effects of climate change in Alaska. Weather, Climate, and Society. 2019. Vol. 11. pp. 245–258. |
Full content | Project approach to benefit sharing during industrial development of the Russian Arctic |