Minerals Sourcing+Image
Responsible Minerals Sourcing Policy - Due Diligence Standards (Step 1.A.7)
Does the company's responsible minerals sourcing policy describe the standards against which due diligence should be conducted?
7624320
Minerals Sourcing
Researched

About the data

In 2020, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) launched a project to develop a methodology to evaluate the extent to which companies embrace the OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains of Minerals from Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas, including how they align with its core elements, the 5-Step framework and the Annex II Model Policy. This metric belongs to that methodology.

However, upon further review the assessment's focus was narrowed down to a set of core metrics which this metric is not part of. The narrowed down assessment can be found here: https://wikirate.org/OECD_Minerals_Guidance_Research

The OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains of Minerals from Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas (OECD Guidance) was developed to provide recommendations to help companies respect human rights and avoid contributing to conflict through their mineral purchasing decisions and practices. The OECD Guidance is for use by any company potentially sourcing minerals or metals from conflict-affected and high-risk areas.

Select as many of the standards mentioned in the policy.

'Other' can include the Cobalt Industry Responsible Assessment Framework (CIRAF), Copper Mark, ResponsibleSteel or Aluminium Stewardship Initiative (ASI). Include the standard(s) mentioned in the Comments field.

If the company does not have a minerals sourcing policy, the answer will be 'Unknown'.
Value Type
Multi-Category
Options
Responsible Minerals Initiative (RMAP)
Responsible Jewelery Council (CoC and CoP)
London Bullion Market Association (Gold Guidance)
Dubai Multi Commodities Center (Rules for RBD-GPM)
Other
No
Research Policy
Community Assessed
Report Type
Supply Chain Policy document