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Transforming Mining with Tech: Fostering Inclusive and Sustainable Development

Transforming Mining with Tech: Fostering Inclusive and Sustainable Development

SERVIR WA Contributes to TechCamp on Illegal Mining

Locally known as "Galamsey" in Ghana, illegal small-scale mining has evolved into a major contributor to deforestation, water, air, and soil pollution, as well as farmland devastation in various parts of the developing world. Furthermore, it exacerbates severe health challenges and leads to an increasing number of school dropouts in mining communities, thereby jeopardizing the social fabric and posing obstacles to sustainable development.

In October 2023, a TechCamp on illegal mining was organized in Takoradi, Ghana by the US State Department with support from the University of Mines and Technology (UMaT) to find long-term, sustainable, innovative and community-based solutions to the entrenched issue of illegal mining.

The TechCamp brought together 50 Ghanaian participants from diverse fields, including representatives of mining, minerals, water resources, health, and other government agencies, as well as stakeholders from the mining sector, public health and environmental organizations, academia, and the media.

This event ignited a collaboration between key Ghanaian partners involved in artisanal small-scale mining (ASM), SERVIR West Africa (SERVIR WA), the joint geospatial initiative of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), and Hyperlocal Elicitation and Understanding of Risks to Stability In Complex Systems (HEURISTICS), a DARPA-funded advanced research project harnessing the power of artificial intelligence to generate hyperlocal predictions and make local knowledge available to decision-makers

Active in Ghana, and 5 other West African countries, SERVIR uses satellite data and geospatial technologies to strengthen weather and climate resilience, agriculture and food security, water security, ecosystem and carbon management, air quality and health. ​ ​ ​ ​ ​

Ghanaian partners and the SERVIR WA hub, led by ICRISAT, identified the HEURISTICS technology as an opportunity to accelerate developing country partners’ use of combined earth observation, expert interviews, predictive models, and advanced language models like ChatGPT. 

Initial discussions were held with NASA and USAID about SERVIR as a joint transition partner for HEURISTICS technology, particularly in the context of SERVIR’s pre-existing investments in the monitoring of artisanal small-scale mining (ASM) activities in Africa and Latin America.

The expected value is to transform existing near-real-time monitoring capability (already deployed in Ghana by the Centre for Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Services (CERSGIS) at University of Ghana) into a proactive predictive platform supporting policy decisions based on both satellite observations and causal inferential frameworks that extract using natural language processing techniques local populations’ beliefs from diverse media and radio transcripts.

This new partnership designed a concept called “Distributed, Interoperable Galamsey Information and Tracking Services” (DIGITS). DIGITS expects to leverage the power of technology including Earth Observation (EO), IoT (Internet of Things), and AI (Artificial Intelligence) to reduce risks associated with human interference in the illegal mining monitoring and regulatory processes. ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​

“We plan to build on recent technological achievements to lay the ground for more distributed, interoperable services that address, using technological and institutional innovations, the intractable political and human problems that have plagued the ASM landscape in Ghana. Our aim is to realize sustainable and responsible ASM,” said Dr Anthony ​ Aubynn, President of the African Institute of Extractive Industries (AIEI) and former CEO, Ghana Minerals Commission and Ghana Chamber of Mines.

Header picture: Participants during the TechCamp Takoradi, 12-14 October 2023. Center: Dr. Anthony Aubynn, President, African Institute of Extractive Industries and former CEO, Ghana Minerals Commission and Ghana Chamber of Mines. Center Left: Dr. Foster Mensah, Executive Director, CERSGIS, University of Ghana and SERVIR West Africa co-principal investigator. Center Right: Pierre C. Sibiry Traore, Global Cluster Lead – Digital Agriculture (ICRISAT), SERVIR West Africa User Engagement Lead and HEURISTICS co-principal investigator. Photo credits: ICRISAT, 2023.

Agathe Diama
Agathe Diama Senior Communications Specialist for West and Central Africa

 

Geo Spatial and Big Data Sciences
About The International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics

The International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) is a pioneering International Organization committed to developing and improving dryland farming and agri-food systems to address the challenges of hunger, malnutrition, poverty, and environmental degradation affecting the 2.1 billion people residing in the drylands of Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and beyond.

ICRISAT was established under a Memorandum of Agreement between the Government of India and the CGIAR on the 28 March 1972. In accordance with the Headquarters Agreement, the Government of India has extended the status of a specified “International Organisation” to ICRISAT under section 3 of the United Nations (Privileges and Immunities) Act, 1947 of the Republic of India through Extraordinary Gazette Notification No. UI/222(66)/71, dated 28 October 1972, issued by the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India.

Our offices:

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East and Southern Africa:  Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Malawi, Zimbabwe

West and Central Africa: Mali, Niger, Nigeria

For all media inquiries, please email: [email protected]

The International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics
Hyderabad, Telangana, India