
Story By: Felix Ernest Odamtten & Muhammad Faisal Mustapha
Ghana’s campaign to transform its artisanal and small-scale mining sector is entering a defining chapter, with the Responsible Cooperative Mining and Skills Development Programme (rCOMSDEP) emerging as one of the country’s most significant policy interventions for promoting legal, environmentally responsible and community centred mining. At the forefront of this effort is National Coordinator Ama Mawusi Mawuenyefia, whose leadership has increasingly become associated with strengthening institutional reforms and advancing a sustainable vision for Ghana’s mining industry.
For decades, illegal mining has remained one of Ghana’s most difficult development challenges, contributing to the destruction of forests, pollution of major rivers and the degradation of productive farmlands. While governments have introduced various interventions over the years, experts have consistently argued that long term success requires not only stronger enforcement but also credible alternatives capable of integrating miners into the formal economy.
Against this backdrop, rCOMSDEP was established to provide that alternative by promoting cooperative mining, technical education, institutional accountability and skills development. The programme represents a shift from punitive responses toward a development driven model that seeks to combine economic opportunity with environmental responsibility.
Since assuming office as National Coordinator, Ama Mawusi Mawuenyefia has supervised the implementation of initiatives aimed at formalising artisanal mining through the establishment and strengthening of legally recognised mining cooperatives. The objective has been to enable miners to operate within Ghana’s regulatory framework while receiving structured technical assistance and institutional support.
Under her stewardship, cooperative mining has increasingly been promoted not merely as a regulatory requirement but as a practical model for improving productivity, enhancing accountability and ensuring that mining activities generate long term benefits for host communities rather than short term environmental costs.
The programme has placed considerable emphasis on capacity building, equipping miners with knowledge in occupational health and safety, environmental protection, cooperative governance, financial management and modern mining techniques. These interventions are intended to improve operational standards while reducing the ecological damage that has long been associated with unregulated mining.
One of the defining characteristics of Ms. Mawuenyefia’s administration has been her commitment to engaging directly with mining communities. Through regular field visits and stakeholder consultations, the programme has maintained continuous dialogue with miners, traditional authorities, local government officials and community leaders to better understand operational realities and develop practical solutions.
Those engagements have also strengthened compliance monitoring by allowing programme officials to identify challenges early, encourage adherence to mining regulations and build stronger relationships between mining cooperatives and regulatory institutions.
Recognising that sustainable mining must also address broader socio economic concerns, rCOMSDEP has expanded its activities beyond mineral extraction by introducing skills development initiatives for young people living in mining communities. The aim is to create alternative livelihood opportunities capable of reducing unemployment and discouraging dependence on illegal mining.
Industry stakeholders say the programme’s growing presence within mining communities has strengthened confidence in cooperative mining and encouraged increasing numbers of miners to embrace environmentally responsible practices that support both economic growth and natural resource conservation.
“Responsible mining is not simply about extracting minerals; it is about protecting communities, preserving ecosystems and ensuring that economic development benefits future generations as much as the present.”
Observers note that implementing reforms within sectors characterised by entrenched economic interests inevitably attracts differing opinions and public scrutiny. As with many reform programmes, policy changes affecting long established practices have generated debate among various stakeholders across the mining industry.
However, there is presently no publicly available evidence linking allegations made against Ms. Mawusi Mawuenyefia to any established wrongdoing, nor have any competent state institutions determined that she engaged in misconduct. The ongoing public discourse reflects the broader challenges often associated with institutional reforms in strategically important sectors.
Despite periods of public attention surrounding her office, individuals familiar with rCOMSDEP’s operations describe Ms. Mawuenyefia as remaining focused on strengthening responsible cooperative mining through continuous stakeholder engagement, institutional improvement and practical policy implementation.
“The future of Ghana’s mining industry will be defined not only by the gold it produces, but by the rivers it preserves, the forests it protects and the communities it empowers.”
According to officials associated with the programme, one of the National Coordinator’s principal priorities has been to develop the Cooperative Mining and Skills Development Secretariat into an efficient, transparent and service oriented institution capable of providing responsible miners with technical guidance while reinforcing accountability across the sector.
The programme’s activities also align with Ghana’s broader environmental objectives by promoting mining practices intended to safeguard forests, protect water bodies and encourage responsible land management. These efforts complement national initiatives aimed at balancing mineral development with ecological sustainability.
As cooperative formation expands, training programmes continue and collaboration deepens among mining communities, traditional authorities and regulatory institutions, rCOMSDEP is increasingly being recognised as an important pillar supporting Ghana’s transition toward a productive, environmentally sustainable and legally compliant artisanal and small-scale mining industry.
“Transforming mining requires more than enforcement; it demands education, cooperation, transparency and leadership that inspires communities to become custodians of both natural resources and national development.”
For many stakeholders, the progress recorded under Ama Mawusi Mawuenyefia’s leadership illustrates the importance of sustained institutional commitment in addressing one of Ghana’s most complex economic and environmental challenges. While significant work remains, the continued emphasis on cooperative development, skills training, environmental stewardship and community engagement has positioned responsible mining as an increasingly important pathway toward securing both Ghana’s mineral wealth and its environmental future.
