12.07.2015 Views

National Mineral Policy 2006 - Department of Mines

National Mineral Policy 2006 - Department of Mines

National Mineral Policy 2006 - Department of Mines

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Using the GRI Guidelines and the Mining and Metals Sector SupplementAnnexure 5IntroductionThe Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) is a long-term, multi-stakeholder, international processwhose mission is to develop and disseminate globally applicable Sustainability ReportingGuidelines (the “Guidelines”). These Guidelines are for voluntary use by organisations 1 forreporting on the economic, environmental, and social dimensions <strong>of</strong> their activities, products,and services. 2 The aim <strong>of</strong> the Guidelines is to assist reporting organisations and theirstakeholders in articulating and understanding contributions <strong>of</strong> the reporting organisations tosustainable development.What Are the GRI Guidelines?The GRI Guidelines are a framework for reporting on an organisation’s economic,environmental, and social performance. The Guidelines:• ?present reporting principles and specific content to guide the preparation <strong>of</strong>organisation-level sustainability reports;• ?assist organisations in presenting a balanced and reasonable picture <strong>of</strong> their economic,environmental, and social performance;• ?promote comparability <strong>of</strong> sustainability reports, while taking into account thepractical considerations related to disclosing information across a diverse range <strong>of</strong>organisations, many with extensive and geographically dispersed operations;• ?support benchmarking and assessment <strong>of</strong> sustainability performance with respect tocodes, performance standards, and voluntary initiatives; and• ?serve as an instrument to facilitate stakeholder engagement.The Guidelines are not:• ?a code or set <strong>of</strong> principles <strong>of</strong> conduct;• ?a performance standard (e.g., emissions target for a specific pollutant); or• ?a management system.The Guidelines do not:• ?provide instruction for designing an organisation’s internal data management andreporting systems; or• ?<strong>of</strong>fer methodologies for preparing reports, or for performing monitoring andverification <strong>of</strong> such reports.1 This includes corporate, governmental, and non-governmental organisations. All are included within GRI’s mission. In itsfirst phase, GRI has emphasised use <strong>of</strong> the Guidelines by corporations with the expectation that governmental and nongovernmentalorganisations will follow in due course.2 GRI uses the term “sustainability reporting” synonymously with citizenship reporting, social reporting, triple-bottom linereporting and other terms that encompass the economic, environmental, and social aspects <strong>of</strong> an organisation’sperformance.275

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!