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Monrovia, Liberia

Liberia

Validation status
Moderate
Joined
27 September 2008
Latest validation
2022
Latest data from
2022
Visit the country website

Overview and role of the EITI

Liberia’s extractive sector – comprised of mining, oil and gas, forestry and agriculture – is the mainstay of the country’s economy, contributing 56.61% of national GDP in 2022. The mining sector is primarily driven by the production and export of iron ore, gold and diamonds. While exploration of oil and gas is ongoing, production has not yet commenced. According to EITI reporting, in FY 2021/22, the extractive sector saw a remarkable revenue surge, reaching USD 182.35 million. Mining contributed 77%, agriculture 19%, and forestry 4%, signifying a substantial 115.52% growth from FY 2020/21 USD 84.7 million. Additionally, the report shows significant fluctuations in production and export data for mining, agriculture, and forestry sectors between 2021/22 and 2019/20. Gold experienced a 33% and 143% increase, while iron ore declined by 5% and 19% due to reduced mining activity and COVID-19 measures. However, gold saw an expansion in mining licenses, with 265 out of 512 active licenses granted by year-end.  

The extractive sector was significantly affected during the Second Liberian Civil War (1999-2003), in particular the timber and diamonds industries. Following the lifting of the UN sanctions against timber and diamonds in 2007 and the inauguration of the Sirleaf administration in 2006, stakeholders revived efforts to strengthen governance of the country’s natural resources to catalyse economic growth.  

The EITI multi-stakeholder process in Liberia continues to be used as a platform to engage stakeholders and build trust between government, industry, civil society and communities. The LEITI process encourages national debate and dialogue on critical sector issues. Liberia EITI (LEITI) is also working to strengthen transparency around beneficial ownership of extractive companies and the disclosure of contracts. 

Economic contribution of the extractive industries

17.16%
to government revenues
99.23%
to exports
56.61%
to GDP
0.50%
to employment
  • Step 1
  • Step 2
  • Step 3

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Innovations and policy reforms

  • LEITI has played a role in promoting transparency of extractive contracts and concessions, which are. published on LEITI's website.
  • A Beneficial ownership assessment report   was published in 2021, to support LEITI’s efforts with the Liberia Business Registry (LBR) and stakeholders on the implementation of Beneficial Ownership Transparency.
  • post award process audit, conducted by LEITI in 2013, found that only 10% of contracts awarded between 2009 and 2011 complied with applicable rules. LEITI's 2012-2013 EITI Report included recommendations on strengthening transparency of licensing processes to improve compliance with legal frameworks. In 2016, LEITI published a second audit for contracts awarded between 2012 and 2015. 
  • The LEITI Act was enacted following the publication of the first EITI Report in 2009, requiring that all government agencies and extractive companies comply with the Liberia EITI process.

Trust is the greatest asset a country can have. Liberia EITI represents an important step in advancing our efforts to engage with stakeholders, to talk about our resources, and to build trust in our communities.

Ellen Johnson Sirleaf Former President of Liberia

Extractive sector data

Production and exports

Gold

Revenue collection

Level of detail 2

Revenue distribution

2022
Standardised revenue types

Top paying companies

2022

Extractive sector management

Licenses and contracts

The Minister of Lands, Mines and Energy grants mining licenses in accordance with the requirements set out in the mining law or regulations. The National Oil Company of Liberia (NOCAL), the state-owned enterprise in the petroleum sector, is mandated to  grant licenses and negotiate contracts in the petroleum sector based on an open bidding process.

The Ministry of Agriculture works with the National Investment Commission (NIC) to identify and propose investors for agricultural projects, which are approved by the president and ratified by parliament.

As per the 2009 LEITI Act, all contracts in Liberia are public and posted on the LEITI website.

Beneficial ownership

While there is no overarching law on beneficial ownership disclosure, provisions in the LEITI Act and the Petroleum Law provide the basis for mandating the collection and disclosure of beneficial ownership information. In 2017, the Liberian government made commitments to advance beneficial ownership disclosure through the Open Government Partnership. A Beneficial ownership assessment report   was published in 2021, to support LEITI’s efforts with the Liberia Business Registry (LBR) and stakeholders on the implementation of Beneficial Ownership Transparency 

In 2015, LEITI launched its first beneficial ownership report, which included ownership data on 49 extractive companies, and an evaluation report on its pilot project. The latest EITI reporting include ownership information on 12 extractive companies.

In September 2021, Liberia launched its participation in Opening Extractives, a global programme aiming to improve the availability and use of beneficial ownership data. A national steering committee, composed of representatives from the Corporate Affairs Commission, LEITI, the Liberia Business Registry and the Liberia Revenue Authority, oversee the programme’s implementation.

In 2022, a scoping assessment report was published by the Opening Extractives programme that examines the state of beneficial ownership reforms in Liberia. The report identified specific gaps in the national legislation and provided recommendations on how Liberia can advance BO reforms. In August 2023, after series of tea series of technical and stakeholder consultation Liberia published its regulation on the declaration of beneficial ownership information for domestic entities.   

Revenue distribution

In accordance with the Liberia Revenue Authority Act, extractive revenues are collected by the Liberia Revenue Authority to be transferred to the Consolidated Fund. The fund consolidates all government revenues and is used for making disbursements. Extractive revenues are not earmarked for specific spending or regions.

Some extractive companies make direct contributions to communities in form of mandatory expenditures and voluntary CSR projects.   


EITI implementation

Governance

LEITI is administered by the Liberia Multi-Stakeholder Steering Group (MSG) and governed by the LEITI Act 2009. The MSG is hosted by the Ministry of Finance. The MSG is currently chaired by Hon. C. Mike Doryen, Managing Director of the Liberia Forestry Authority (FDA).

Validation

Liberia achieved a moderate overall score (75.5 points) in implementing the 2019 EITI Standard in June 2022, following its second Validation. The Validation identified 14 corrective actions and 16 strategic recommendations for strengthening its EITI implementation.

For more information about planned Validations, consult the Validation schedule.

Scorecard

Latest Validation: 17 June 2022
Year

Assessment of EITI requirements

  • Not met
  • Partly met
  • Mostly met
  • Fully met
  • Exceeded
Component View more
Score

The three components of Validation each receive a score out of 100, as follows:

Low 0-49
Fairly low 50-69
Moderate 70-84
High 85-92
Very high 93-100
View more

Outcomes and impact

81.5 Moderate
Scorecard by requirement
Assessment
Assessment of EITI Requirements

Validation assesses the extent to which each EITI Requirement is met, using five categories. The component score is an average of the points awarded for each requirement that falls within the component.

Outcomes and impact

1.5 Work plan

90

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Requirement 1.5 is fully met, over the period assessed in the previous Validation. Liberia has a current and updated EITI work plan,which reflects some national priorities for the 2021-22 period, agreed by the MSG in October 2021. Members of the MSG consulted appeared broadly content with the LEITI work plan as a monitoring and evaluation tool. Some stakeholders consulted noted that the current LEITI work plan did not cover areas where LEITI was playing a role, such as input to ongoing or planned legal and regulatory reforms such as amendments to the Mining Act. Previously, the MSG’s approved a strategic plan covering 2017-20, which has not been renewed. However, the MSG did not have an annual work plan agreed or published between June 2018 and 31 December 2019. Thus, there have been significant periods of time when the MSG did not have a current work plan in place, which coincided with the LEITI governance crisis. The current EITI work plan covers 18 months (1 July 2021-31 December 2022) to harmonise it with government’s alignment of fiscal year with the calendar year from January 2022. Liberia’s 2021-22 EITI work plan is publicly accessible and appears to cover most aspects of Requirement 1.5. The current work plan includes a section setting out objectives that are linked to national priorities, with the MSG noting in its ‘Stakeholder engagement’ template that the work plan objectives were developed to support key provisions of Liberia’s 5-year national development policy on employment and governance. The work plan development process is guided by the LEITI Work plan Development Procedures, which prioritises stakeholder engagement. Stakeholder consultations indicated that the MSG adopted a consultative approach to developing the 2021-22 work plan, with some outreach to the broader civil society constituency in the development of the work plan although evidence of outreach within the industry constituency is less clear. The work plan outlines measurable and time-bound activities aimed at addressing the LEITI Secretariat’s and stakeholders’ capacity constraints, strengthening systematic disclosures, improving the engagement of legislators in the EITI process and use of EITI data in contracts ratification, implementing the recommendations from Validation and EITI implementation, and strengthening contract disclosure and beneficial ownership reporting.The work plan is costed and identifies funding sources, primarily the government and the African Development Bank (AfDB) but highlights a funding gap of 24%. The work plan includes some activities related to regulatory reform, such as the development of beneficial ownership regulations, but does not include activities related to legal or administrative reforms, such as providing input to the ongoing developments of amendments for the Mines and Minerals Act or following up on key recommendations in the 12th LEITI Report related to strengthening government oversight of mineral production and state equity in mining companies. Key activities undertaken by LEITI such as input to the development of amendments to the Mines and Minerals Act are not reflected in the work plan, despite efforts since 2020. Stakeholders consulted considered the lack of activities related to such legal reforms as an oversight and noted that LEITI provided input to legal reforms even if the work plan did not explicitly cover this. Nonetheless, the work plan is linked to the LEITI Monitoring and Evaluation Framework as articulated in the 2017-20 Strategic Plan, which requires the annual work plan to cover monitoring and evaluation activities and the annual progress report to review progress against objectives.

7.1 Public debate

90

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Requirement 7.1 is fully met. Several stakeholders from different constituencies noted that the pace of LEITI outreach and dissemination had slowed, initially due to the interruption in the EITI process in 2017-19 and subsequently due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Opinions were split over whether LEITI could have undertaken more outreach in 2021, given financial constraints. Several stakeholders consulted outside of the MSG considered that the objective of enabling evidence-based public debate on extractive industry governance through active communication of relevant LEITI data to key stakeholders was not yet fulfilled. However, the MSG’s comments on the draft assessment argued forcefully that the objective of robust and dynamic dissemination of LEITI data was fulfilled through the institutionalisation of LEITI focal points in each of Liberia’s 15 counties. Liberia produced the 9th (2015-16), 10th&11th (2016-18) and 12th (2018-19) LEITI Reports in the period under review, in December 2018, December 2019 and April 2021 respectively. While outreach, dissemination and communications activities were interrupted by the broader gap in implementation in 2017-19, the MSG resumed some limited outreach efforts in the latter half of 2019 before being interrupted again in early 2020 by the Covid-19 pandemic. While most MSG members considered that dissemination efforts during the entire 2020-21 period were interrupted by the pandemic, several other stakeholders not directly represented on the MSG considered that it would have been possible to ensure more targeted online EITI dissemination and outreach in 2021. The MSG has produced and disseminated a summary of findings from the 9th and 10th&11th LEITI Reports. There is evidence of LEITI producing infographics and other visualisations drawing from the EITI Reports particularly up to 2017, although reports of outreach activities in 2021 indicate that the development of visualisations resumed in the last year of implementation when some outreach and dissemination activities resumed. The 2021-22 work plan includes plans for a summary of the 12th LEITI Report, although this had not yet been done at the start of Validation. The summary reports have been disseminated through different channels including town-hall meetings in different counties across the country. LEITI utilizes its focal persons resident in at least nine of the 15 counties to coordinate outreach and dissemination activities, including in the townhall meetings. The LEITI Secretariat has led some limited outreach and dissemination efforts in late 2019, and the MSG appoints one member from each constituency to participate in each event, ensuring some multi-stakeholder engagement in outreach. LEITI has disseminated annual progress reports, summary EITI Reports and the simplified contract matrix developed in 2015 through events in the various counties and youth engagement programmes, although this was largely interrupted in the 2018-20 period, with a limited resumption of activities in 2021. Several stakeholders consulted noted MSG plans to update the 2015 contract matrix in light of new concessions and contracts but could not estimate the timeframe for doing so due to funding constraints. The MSG has made some effort to take gender considerations into account by convening a workshop on enhancing women’s participation in the extractive industries. Young people have been considered through LEITI’s engagement with the Extractive Club Programme operated with public schools, which includes an EITI-related essay competition for school students. However, the MSG’s submission for this Validation and its comments on the draft assessment indicate that there had been two LEITI outreach and dissemination event in 2020 and five events in 2021. Although the public events were limited in the period 2020–2021 due to COVID-19 restrictions on public gathering, LEITI has sometimes used radio programmes and updates to its Facebook page to engage stakeholders on EITI issues, programmes, and activities. LEITI has hired a Communications Officer and updated its Communications Strategy to cover the period 2021-2023, agreed and published in late 2021. The updated strategy document addresses specific challenges and gaps identified in communicating with various target groups since 2015 and aims to provide a roadmap for LEITI awareness campaigns. There is some evidence that EITI data isused to inform parliamentary debate and policy making, with anecdotal evidence that lawmakers reference EITI data in discussion of natural resource governance during public appearances (e.g.,radio programmes). The civil society constituency, PWYP Liberia,in particular, appears to make use of the EITI for advocacy and lobbying, although there is less evidence of analytical research or studies that make use of EITI data. Several consulted stakeholders considered that the lack of use of LEITI data in research and advocacy was due to both weaknesses in capacity and insufficient efforts to disseminate and promote LEITI data online. There is some documented evidence of use of EITI data or findings through news reports on the extractive industries, primarily in the newspaper Daylight’s coverage (in October 2021, December 2021 and January 2022). National and international press coverage of Liberia EITI in the 2018-19 period focused on developments related to LEITI’s governance, including in the main national newspapers. There was slightly more press coverage of EITI disclosures in the 2020-21 period, mostly focused on the launches of EITI Reports, with the exception of the Daylight’s coverage, with some commentary on the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on aggregate extractive revenues by other newspapers. Press coverage has not focused on recommendations from EITI reporting or other LEITI findings and data on the extractive industries. In its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG argued that the LEITI dissemination process is robust and dynamic, highlighting the role of the 15 LEITI focal persons, each based in the different counties of Liberia and roughly gender equal, in driving dissemination and outreach at the subnational level. The MSG argued strongly that the team of LEITI focal persons engaged residents of their respective communities on a regular basis throughout the period under review. The Secretariat’s view is that it is challenging to dissociate the impact of the LEITI governance challenges and of the subsequent COVID-19 pandemic from the slow-down in LEITI outreach and dissemination activities. Despite the interruption of outreach and dissemination activities after 2017, there is evidence of the MSG’s greater focus on outreach since the second half of 2021. The Secretariat is also conscious of the limitations of remote stakeholder consultations for Validation, particularly with regards to efforts to promote the EITI’s use in public debate. The LEITI Secretariat and MSG have made efforts to overcome the constraints and established a communications strategy to structure outreach and dissemination moving forward, although the strategy had not yet started being implemented in the period under review. The Secretariat considers weaknesses in stakeholder engagement are covered elsewhere (see Requirement 1) and that, on balance, there has not been back-sliding since the previous Validation given the resumption of activities in the year prior to Validation.

7.2 Data accessibility and open data

90

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Requirement 7.2 is fully met. Stakeholders consulted did not express any particular opinions on whether the objective of enabling the broader use and analysis of information on the extractive industries through the publication of data in open format had been fulfilled, although one noted that most information on the LEITI and other government websites was not in open format. The secretariat’s view is that the underlining objective has been fulfilled given the alignment of LEITI’s open data policy and practices with national policy on the release and promotion of open data. The LEITI MSG has an open data policy (Page 1and page 2) which is essentially an adoption of both the Liberia National Data Sharing and Exchange Policy (NDSEP), developed by the Liberia Institute of Statistics and Geo-Information Services (LISGIS), and the open data provisions in the Liberia OGP National Action Plan for 2020-2022. The NDSEP particularly defines the principles and guidelines for sharing data and making it available (using recognised standards and statistical classification schemes) and accessible to all stakeholders, with minimum delay and at no cost. The policy specifies that “there will be full and open exchange of data, metadata, statistics and other information products among government ministries and agencies, and other stakeholders, recognising relevant policies and legislation, as well as international instruments and standards.” The MSG’s comments on the draft assessment note that it resolved to adopt the NDSEP for use on LEITI data, to avoid duplication in developing a new open data policy. The policies are published on the LISGIS and LEITI websites. LEITI has published summary data files for all fiscal years covered by EITI reporting (up to and including 2018-19), and they are accessible on its refurbished website. The data from the EITI Report is published as excel tables on the LEITI website in the ‘EITI Reports’ section. The accessibility of the published summary data on the LEITI website could be improved given that all files are listed in a single section (under key documents), although they are also accessible through the website’s search function as highlighted in the MSG’s comments on the draft assessment. There are limited systematic disclosures of EITI data in government systems, although there have been important advances in license information. The Ministry of Mines and Energy maintains an online cadastral portal that provides for bulk download in machine-readable open data format (.csv) on licensing (including license applications), legal owners and non-tax mining revenues. The EITI Report remains the primary means of disclosure of the majority of data required by the EITI Standard.

7.3 Follow up on recommendations

60

The Secretariat’s assessment is that thereis evidence of backsliding on the assessment of ‘satisfactory progress’ in the previous Validationand that Requirement 7.3 is mostly met. Opinions were split over whether the objective of EITI implementation ensuring a continuous learning process that contributes to policy-making was being fulfilled. Several stakeholders consulted from all constituencies highlighted that more senior government engagement in the MSG was needed, together with a robust mechanism for following up on EITI recommendations, in order for the EITI to lead to more reforms in practice. There is evidence of the MSG discussing findings, lessons learned and recommendations from EITI reporting and implementation, as reflected in minutes of MSG meetings. While there appears to be a general system in place for the MSG to track the LEITI Secretariat’s follow-up on recommendations, this does not yet appear to constitute a robust mechanism for consistently following up on EITI recommendations. Recommendations from Liberia’s 9th, 10th-11thand 12thEITI Reports published since the last Validation range from proposals to strengthen the mechanics of EITI implementation (e.g., appointing focal points in each government entity)to recommendations for reform of government systems (e.g., improving the Ministry of Mines and Energy’s oversight of mining production and strengthening its tracking of government equity interests in mining companies). The LEITI work plan includes activities related to generally following up on recommendations as well as to implementation of recommendations related to EITI implementation, while the annual progress report provides a cursory overview of the status of follow-up on each recommendation. However, the latest annual progress report produced covers 2019 given delays in producing the 2020 annual progress report due to the Covid-19 pandemic(see Requirement 7.4). The EITI Reports provide an overview of the status of follow-up on previous EITI Report recommendations. The 12th LEITI Report noted that none of the recommendations of the previous report had yet been addressed. The MSG’s ‘Outlook and impact’ template for this Validation tracked progress against 16 corrective actions and recommendations from Liberia’s last Validation in 2017, but not on the status of follow-up on recommendations from Liberia’s own EITI reporting. The MSG had developed the 2017-20 strategy based on its review of lessons learned over the 2015-17 period, but this medium-term strategy lapsed and was not updated due to the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. In practice, the MSG’s mechanism for following up on recommendations appears to be to delegate this follow-up to the LEITI Secretariat, which holds meetings with entities relevant to specific recommendations. Opinions of stakeholders consulted were split over whether this mechanism was effective in practice. Most MSG members considered that the mechanism was effective, highlighting input that LEITI had made on draft Mining Act and FIU Act amendments related to beneficial ownership. Several other stakeholders however considered that the mechanism could be considerably strengthened by greater involvement of the MSG, and by more senior government participation on the MSG. LEITI’s contribution to public debate is clearer than its impact on strengthening government and company systems. There is little evidence of the follow up on EITI recommendations leading to reforms of government systems in the 2017-21 period. There have been tangible contributions by LEITI to legal reforms related to beneficial ownership, for instance in the Liberian Petroleum Regulatory Act in 2016. However, the lack of effective MSG oversight in the 2017–2019 period and the delegation of MSG engagement to lower-level government proxies has meant that the mechanism for follow up on recommendations in the period reviewed under the last Validation did not effectively function. While the MSG has been reconstituted with an operational national secretariat, the system of delegation of follow-upon recommendations to the LEITI Secretariat (with its capacity constraints – see Requirement 1.4) is not sufficient to ensure effective follow-up on recommendations.

7.4 Review of outcomes and impact of implementation

75

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Requirement 7.4 is mostly met, with considerable improvement over the previous Validation.The few stakeholders consulted who expressed a view on the issue did not consider that the objective of regular public monitoring and evaluation of Liberia’s EITI implementation had yet been fulfilled. However, the Secretariat’s view is that there has been more progress towards this objective than in the previous Validation, given evidence of the MSG’s discussions of efforts to strengthen the impact of EITI on natural resource governance, even if documentation of these discussions is weak. Following the gap in EITI implementation more generally in 2017-19, the LEITI produced an annual activity report covering 2017-2018 in December 2019, and an annual progress report covering 2019 in December 2020. The MSG did not produce an annual progress report covering 2020 as of the start of Validation in January 2022, but stakeholders consulted explained that this was due to the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and that an annual progress report covering 2020-21 combined was expected to be published in the first half of 2022. Thus, the Secretariat considers that the delays in publication of a review of outcomes and impact of EITI implementation for 2020 are reasonable considering the broader context. The 2019 annual progress report follows the standard EITI template, and covers the majority of Requirement 7.4.a, including a review of performance against target work plan activities, an assessment of the country’s performance against each of the EITI requirements, and an overview of responses to recommendations of the EITI Reports. Documentation provided and stakeholder views indicated some outreach within the industry and civil society constituencies on the annual progress report, although the level of input to the work plan is unclear. Although the annual activity and progress reports provide a short description of the strengths and weaknesses in EITI implementation in the year under review (2017-19), it does not include a review of the impact of EITI implementation to date nor documentation of efforts to strengthen the impact of EITI implementation on natural resource governance. While the 2017-20 strategic plan(published in 2017) identified actions aimed at strengthening the impact of EITI implementation, no review of the plan to measure the performance and impact of the activities therein appears to have been carried out in the period under review. However, as highlighted in the MSG’s comments on the draft assessment, the MSG convened a two-day retreat in Grand Bassa County in February 2021 to discuss the impact of EITI implementation on natural resource governance, as well as LEITI governance processes. Yet the report on the MSG’s retreat does not document stakeholder views on the impact of the EITI process to date or on ways of strengthening the EITI’s impact in future in accordance with Requirement 7.4.a.v. There is some evidence in MSG meeting minutes of discussions related to progress in work plan implementation as well as some of the outcomes, although the MSG does not yet appear to have published a document that captures views of stakeholders beyond the MSG on the outcomes and impact of the EITI process. In its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG argued that the assessment of Requirement 7.4 should be upgraded to fully met, given evidence of MSG discussions of the outcomes and impact of the EITI process. The comments also highlighted the development and submission by LEITI and the government’s other integrity institutions of a resolution to the Presidency of Liberia on ways of strengthening anti-corruption efforts. The comments also highlighted the LEITI Secretariat’s participation in three Inter-Agency Retreats in 2020-21 to develop a Memorandum of Understanding to increase awareness of transparency, legal confidentiality requirements and inter-agency information-sharing related to the forestry sector, which was signed in December 2021. However, the Secretariat’s view is that, despite improvements since the previous Validation, the requirement for all relevant stakeholders including those not directly represented on the MSG to contribute to the MSG’s annual review of outcomes and impact, and for this review of outcomes and impact to be publicly accessible, has not yet been comprehensively addressed.

Effectiveness and sustainability indicators

0.5

Stakeholder engagement

75 Moderate
Scorecard by requirement
Assessment
Assessment of EITI Requirements

Validation assesses the extent to which each EITI Requirement is met, using five categories. The component score is an average of the points awarded for each requirement that falls within the component.

Multi-stakeholder oversight

1.1 Government engagement

90

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Requirement 1.1 is fully met. Opinions were split over whether the objective of full, active and effective government lead for EITI implementation had been fulfilled. Several stakeholders from different constituencies considered that the lack of regular senior government engagement and statements of support for the EITIwere significant impediments in a centralised government system like Liberia. Some development partners highlighted with concern that LEITI received the lowest funding of all integrity institutions of the Government of Liberia. Several stakeholders consulted considered that government engagement in EITI was not being led by high-level involvement from ministries responsible for finance or extractives. However, in its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG argued strongly that it considered the objective of full, active and effective engagement by the government to have been fulfilled in the 2019-21 period particularly, in both the resolution and aftermath of the LEITI governance crisis in 2018-19. The period under review (2017-21) was marked by Liberia’s first peaceful transition of government administrations in early 2018 and the COVID-19 pandemic since 2020. EITI implementation was effectively interrupted by the political transition and the new government’s deviations from provisions of the LEITI Act in 2018. Implementation of the EITI has effectively resumed since the second half of 2019, although the seniority of the government’s representation in EITI activities since 2019 appears lower than in the period reviewed under the previous Validation (2013-17). The 2009 Liberia EITI (LEITI) Act provides a robust legal basis for ensuring the government’s continued commitment to EITI at the most senior levels, as highlighted in the MSG’s comments on the draft assessment. The seniority of the government officials in the lead of EITI implementation in the 2017-21 period has been lower than previously, now at the Head of Department level rather than the Deputy Minister or Minister level in the 2009-2016 period. While President Weah is regarded as the EITI Champion, the MSG has been chaired by the FDA’s C. Mike Doryen and co-chaired by Minister of Mines and Energy Gesler E. Murray since 2018.They replaced Minister of Finance Boima Kamara and Minister of Mines and Energy Patrick Sendolo respectively. While the current chair and co-chair appear to have the confidence of all MSG members, several stakeholders consulted considered that the lack of participation of the Minister of Finance meant that EITI was not as highly prioritised as previously.However, the MSG’s comments on the draft assessment argued that the participation in the EITI process of Assistant and Deputy Ministers, who are considered senior government officials, ensured effective government engagement and leadership of EITI implementation. They also noted the Minister of Finance’s participation in a December 2018 MSG meeting and in a meeting with the International Secretariat delegation to Monrovia in late 2019 as evidence of the Minister’s support and engagement. There have been regular public statements of support for the EITI from the MSG chair, Forestry Development Authority (FDA) Managing Director C. Mike Doryen, throughout the period, including at the launches of the 10th and 11th LEITI Reports and the 12th LEITI Report. There have been fewer public commitments to the EITI from senior government officials. Deputy Finance Minister Samora P. Z. Wolokollie expressed strong support for the EITI at the launch of Liberia’s Opening Extractives programme in September 2021, and Assistant Minister for Revenue and Tax Policy (Ministry of Finance and Development Planning) T. Ojuku Nyenpan expressed strong commitment at the MSG’s December 2021 retreat. There is some evidence of involvement by other senior government ministers and from President George Weah in the period 2018-21, including participation in EITI activities and related statements of support by Assistant and Deputy Ministers as well as President Weah’s (undocumented)statements of support for LEITI at the appointment of the new MSG in November 2021. The MSG argues in its comments on the draft assessment that it does not consider that regular public commitments to the EITI are required of senior government officials given LEITI’s legal institutionalisation and the alignment of EITI implementation with the government’s policy agenda.The MSG also noted that the government’s commitment to ‘Opening Extractives’ consisted of a commitment to ensure that all responsible government agencies prioritise the programme within government, including in the provision of resources. Available documentation and stakeholder consultations indicate that the government has actively participated in most aspects of EITI implementation in this period, although there is evidence that it exceeded its mandate in appointing a new Head of Secretariat and seeking to influence nominations to the MSG in 2018. While the incoming administration rescinded the decisions on LEITI officeholders following public outcry and intervention by the EITI Board in 2019, this governance crisis caused delays in Liberia’s EITI implementation.This development raised concerns among stakeholders, particularly from civil society, about government commitment to safeguarding the integrity of the EITI Principle as codified in the LEITI Act and the EITI Standard. The MSG subsequently recruited a new Head of Secretariat and a Deputy Head following the procedures set out in the LEITI Act and MSG Policy Manual, as highlighted in the MSG’s comments on the draft assessment. Nonetheless, government continued to play an active role in the EITI process in this period. Government representation on the MSG appears to include all appropriate government ministries, departments and agencies. Other relevant agencies like the Liberia Business Registry (LBR) and the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) are represented on the MSG through their line ministries and participate in Liberia’s Opening Extractives programme. Attendance of government officials at MSG meetings appears relatively consistent. The MSG includes five Ministers as members in accordance with the LEITI Act, who have attended meetings on a few occasions but have generally delegated attendance to proxies, usually their respective Deputy-or Assistant-Ministers, particularly from the Ministry of Finance. Key government entities appear to provide the required data for EITI reporting. The MSG organised the appointment of EITI focal points within each relevant government entity in 2021 to facilitate annual data collection and follow-up to recommendations from EITI reporting. In its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG argued that senior government representation is not feasible at every MSG meeting given their other responsibilities, but that the MSG’s view is that delegation to proxies in the 2019-21 period nonetheless ensured effective engagement by the government in all aspects of EITI implementation. The MSG’s comments noted that delegation was to Assistant or Deputy Ministers, who consistently kept the nominated government MSG members updated on developments and have at times led to Cabinet-level discussions of the EITI. They also noted that all government appointees attending LEITI activities are provided with the authority to influence decision-making. The government has provided resources for the LEITI national secretariat in the 2017-20 period, even when development partners pulled out and the implementation was interrupted. However, the government’s initial appointment of a Head of Secretariat, Gabriel Nyenkan, without the MSG’s oversight, despite provisions of the LEITI Act to that effect, was the act that prompted the governance crisis in LEITI in 2018. The crisis is extensively described in the Board’s review of adherence to Requirement 1 in Liberia in June 2019 and February 2020. Following outcry from civil society and a mission by the International Secretariat, the government-appointed HoS was replaced by one appointed through a competitive recruitment process, Jeffrey Yates. The staff of the Secretariat that had been initially appointed by the government in 2018 were gradually replaced in the 2019-20 period. The Secretariat transitioned to a competitive recruitment process since the fourth quarter of 2019.Following the passing of the Deputy HoS in May 2021, the position has remained vacant pending recruitments. This appears to have placed additional work demands on existing secretariat staff. Available data suggests that the government has sought to ensure sufficient funding for EITI implementation, although significant funding gaps in 2016-19 constrained the execution of certain work plan activities such as dissemination. The government continued to cover the salaries of secretariat staff and costs of EITI implementation in a diminished way during the 2018-19 governance crisis, but development partners withdrew from the process. According to LEITI data, government funding rose from USD 208,709 in 2018 to USD 406,286 in 2019, before reverting to USD 254,925 in 2020 and USD 276,052 in 2021. However, data from the 2022 draft government budget indicates that total government disbursements to LEITI totalled USD 1,296,003 in 2020-21, before falling to USD 102,449 in FY 2021, inclusive of staff salaries. While this cut-back was in line with other austerity measures by the government, several stakeholders consulted noted that the LEITI budget had been reduced the most when compared with the government’s other integrity institutions. Government projections include budgets of USD 490,849 for LEITI in 2022, USD 335,245 in 2023 and USD 514,216 in 2024. Several development partners raised significant concerns over the significant drop in government funding for LEITI, noting that it was the national integrity institution whose budget had been cut most significantly in recent years. Several stakeholders considered that LEITI’s challenges in filling vacant national secretariat positions was due to the low level of staff salaries. The government’s re-commitment to the EITI in 2019 helped restore development partners’ confidence in the process, with DfID approving a grant of USD 106,000 for the publication and dissemination of the 2016-18 EITI Report. The government accounts for 40% of funding in Liberia’s current (2021-22) EITI work plan, although a funding gap of 24% of planned expenditures remains outstanding in the work plan. In its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG highlighted that the current and previous governments continued to provide budgetary funding for EITI implementation despite challenging circumstances. The MSG highlighted the provision of USD 272,000 in emergency six-month funding in 2019(covered in the national media)to support the revitalisation of the LEITI Secretariat following Liberia’s suspension by the EITI Board. Evidence submitted in the MSG’s Outcomes and Impact template indicates that government officials have consistently participated in LEITI dissemination and outreach activities. However, this engagement in public debate has been led by government MSG members and there is little evidence of the government more broadly driving outreach and dissemination, including on the part of officials not directly represented on the MSG. Nonetheless, there is evidence of government officials taking action to overcome barriers to implementation, including through follow-up with material companies that had not disclosed their beneficial ownership in the 2018-19 EITI Report. The government appears to have taken steps to follow up on recommendations from EITI reporting and Validation, although several stakeholders consulted considered that the government’s follow-up on EITI recommendations was not sufficiently effective (see Requirement 7.3). In its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG argued forcefully for an upgrade in the assessment of Requirement 1.1 to fully met, based on its view that government engagement was sufficiently full, active and effective for the needs of EITI implementation. The Secretariat’s view is that it is important to acknowledge the significant improvements in government engagement in the EITI process since the 2018-19 period, when implementation was disrupted by the LEITI governance crisis. While the Secretariat’s view is that the assessment of Requirement 1.1 is borderline between mostly met and fully met, it considers that, on balance, the objective of full government engagement has been achieved in the period since the resolution of the LEITI governance crisis.

1.2 Company engagement

60

The Secretariat’s assessment is that there has been backsliding on the assessment of ‘satisfactory progress’ in the previous Validation and that Requirement 1.2 is mostly met. Consulted stakeholder views on whether the objective of full, active and effective engagement industry engagement had been fulfilled were split. Some on the MSG considered that the larger mining, forestry and agriculture companies selected to participate in EITI reporting broadly complied. Several other stakeholders considered that industry engagement in the mining sector particularly had been lacking, with only one representative seeking to coordinate the mining constituency without support from an industry association and gaps in company participation in the 2018-19 EITI Report seen as a particular concern. Stakeholders highlighted the creation of a Chamber of Mines in 2022, which was considered by stakeholders as likely to have a role in EITI in future. Some stakeholders consulted considered that the industry constituency had not been proactive either during the LEITI governance crisis of 2017-19 or since then, particularly in canvassing the broader constituency or in engaging in outreach and dissemination. However, in its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG argued that it considered the objective of full, active and effective industry engagement to have been fulfilled, highlighting the participation of a representative from the Liberia Timber Association in dissemination events in Bomi, Cape Mount and Gbarpolu Counties in 2021. Nonetheless, the Secretariat’s view is that the broader objective of full, active and effective industry engagement was mostly fulfilled in the period under review given weaknesses in constituency coordination mechanism beyond LEITI’s outreach to the constituency, particularly in the mining sector. The establishment of a functioning Chamber of Mines in 2022 is an important step towards establishing these constituency coordination mechanisms for the mining sector. Available documentation and stakeholder consultations indicate that industry representatives on the MSG actively participate in EITI activities. The industry constituency’s representation on the MSG appears to generally reflect the structure of the country’s extractive industries, insofar as it consists of one member from each sector (oil and gas,mining, forestry and agriculture). The forestry sector is represented through the industry association (Liberia Timber Association), while the oil and gas sector is represented by the general Liberia Business Association (LBA). Stakeholders consulted explained that, in the absence of an industry-specific association for petroleum, the MSG had agreed with the private sector to include the LBA given that all oil and gas companies were members of the association. The mining and agriculture sectors are represented on the MSG by individual companies, Arcelor Mittal and Golden Veroleum Liberia respectively. Available documentation indicates that the mining MSG member was reappointed in October 2021, in the absence of interest from the other two mining companies solicited as part of the nomination process. In its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG highlighted that the LEITI Secretariat had reached out to the Chamber of Mines in 2021 as part of the MSG nominations procedures, but that the association was not yet prepared to nominate an MSG representative pending the appointment of the Chamber’s formal leadership. The MSG also highlighted that the MSG member representing the agricultural sector was appointed by unanimous agreement of member of the Liberia Agriculture Companies Association (LACA), as confirmed in the LACA’s letter of confirmation of this appointment. Liberia EITI’s MSG attendance tracker and minutes of MSG meetings indicate that industry MSG members regularly attend meetings and contribute effectively to discussions. However, the level of consultations with the broader industry constituency on EITI matters remains unclear, particularly in the mining sector. The MSG’s ‘Stakeholder engagement’ template submitted for this Validation indicated that the broader industry constituency had been engaged in the work planning processes, although the specific contributions of companies not on the MSG is unclear from the documentation provided. Although LEITI’s outreach activities were significantly impacted by both the governance crisis of 2017-19 and the Covid-19 pandemic since 2020, there is little evidence of mining industry representatives attending LEITI outreach and dissemination activities in the period under review.The MSG requires one member from each constituency to attend LEITI events, although industry has tended to be represented by the agriculture and forestry sectors. While the constituency’s plans for developing its own “constituency feedback mechanism” as a means of regularly canvassing the broader constituency were delayed due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic since 2020, several stakeholders consulted explained that this was planned to proceed in March 2022. In general, companies appear to have provided the required data for EITI reporting. In the last EITI Report produced based on reconciliation of company payments and government revenues(the 10th and 11th EITI Report), only one of the 19 material companies (Simba Energy, not linked to an EITI Supporting Company)failed to report, with the value of its payments to government not considered significant. While a larger number of companies (seven of 19 material companies) did not provide the required contextual (non-financial) information for the 12th EITI Report, which was based on unilateral government disclosures of extractive revenues, subsequent government and MSG follow-up with non-reporting companies ensured that a larger number disclosed their beneficial ownership information for Liberia EITI’s beneficial ownership diagnostic report published in late 2021. The non-reporting mining, oil and gas companies in the 12th LEITI Report consisted of China Union Liberia Investment Co. Ltd., Zwedru Mining Inc.,as well as ExxonMobil and Chevron, although the latter two had closed their operations in Liberia at the time of preparation of the report. There continues to have been an enabling environment for company participation in the EITI since the previous Validation, and there is no evidence of any new obstacles in relevant laws, regulations, administrative rules or actual practices.

1.3 Civil society engagement

90

There does not appear to have been back-sliding on Requirement 1.3, which was assessed as ‘satisfactory progress’ in the previous Validation.Thus, the Secretariat’s assessment is that Requirement 1.3 remains fully met in the period under review. There was broad consensus among stakeholders consulted that civil society was fully, actively and effectively engaged in the EITI process, and that there had been an enabling environment for civil society participation in the EITI. Several stakeholders highlighted civil society’s advocacy as a key reason for the resolution of the LEITI governance challenges in 2017-19. There do not appear to have been any new legal, regulatory, administrative or practical constraints on civil society’s ability to engage in all aspects of the EITI process since the previous Validation. Liberia’s rankings for general civic space by international NGOs have improved slightly since the period reviewed by the previous Validation, with Civicus’ assessment improving from ‘repressed’ in 2017 to ‘obstructed’ since 2019 and Freedom House’s ranking remaining ‘partly free’ (with minor improvements in the score from 60/100 in 2017-19 to 62/100 in 2020-21). Available documentation(including civil society’s submission for this Validation)and stakeholder views confirm the lack of constraints on civil society’s ability to actively engage in EITI implementation. While some civil society representatives consulted off of the MSG noted that they had received phone calls following their publications of views critical of the government’s budget management, they explained that these calls consisted of criticism rather than threats or efforts to censor information. Evidence suggests that civil society representatives in Liberia are able to engage in public debate related to the EITI process and express opinions about the EITI process without restraint, coercion or reprisal. The Facebook pages of the PWYP Liberia coalition and the National Civil Society Council of Liberia catalogue regular civil society views often critical of government and industry’s management of the extractive industries. There is less evidence of active public expression on the part of the Labor Congress of Liberia (LCL) and the Minerals Civil Society Organization of Liberia (MCSOL), the two other key organisations that coordinate the constituency. Nonetheless, minutes of MSG meetings indicate that civil society members regularly and actively contribute to discussions. While the tone of debate between MSG members appeared particularly confrontational in the 2017-19 period, the recovery from LEITI’s governance crisis and the return to MSG decision-making by consensus appears to have improved the environment for free expression on the MSG. Civil society appears to operate freely in relation to EITI implementation and in their broader work on natural resource governance. All CSOs active within the constituency appear duly registered and there is no evidence of any delays in registration in the period under review. Non-profit organisations appear able to raise funding from both national and international sources, including resources from the African Development Bank (AfDB) for dissemination activities in 2021. However, stakeholder consultations and Liberia’s 2017-18 and 2019 annual progress reports highlight technical and financial constraints on civil society’s engagement in the EITI process. These constraints do not appear linked to government constraints however and there is evidence that the MSG has sought to facilitate access to funding by CSOs, including through devoting some funding for the work plan to CSOs to carry out specific activities. Despite these constraints, MSG meeting minutes reflect active engagement by civil society members, including on technical issues related to issues such as beneficial ownership transparency. Civil society representatives appear able to associate, communicate and cooperate freely with each other in regard to the EITI process. The four key organisations (PWYP, NSCL, LCL and MCSOL) play a coordinating role within the constituency, both in coordinating appointments to the MSG and in ensuring constituency consultations. The development of a ‘constituency feedback mechanism’, supported by the AfDB in 2021, was highlighted by several stakeholders consulted as an important step in further enhancing the regular consultations with the broader constituency. Available evidence suggests that civil society is actively engaged in all aspects of EITI implementation, both in terms of MSG members’ participation in EITI activities and in the broader constituency’s input to the design of EITI implementation (such as through input to the annual work plan) as well as in outreach and dissemination. The LEITI governance crisis in 2018-19 reflected the strength of civil society’s advocacy given that this public outcry was key in resolving the situation. Civil society appears able to influence public decision-making on extractive industry governance, both through the LEITI process as well as through other mechanisms such as public hearings and public advocacy campaigns. The governance crisis in LEITI reflected civil society’s influence in ensuring continued adherence to the EITI Principles.

1.4 MSG governance

60

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Requirement 1.4 is mostly met in the period under review.While most MSG members consulted considered that the objective of an independent MSG that can exercise active and meaningful oversight of all aspects of EITI implementation, balancing the three main constituencies’ interests in an equal manner, had been fulfilled, several stakeholders not directly represented on the MSG considered that the MSG’s oversight of implementation had deteriorated since the period reviewed by the previous Validation(prior to 2016), citing the interruption of EITI implementation due to the LEITI governance crisis in 2018-19 and perceived weaknesses in the engagement of government and industry in the MSG’s activities, including in outreach and dissemination, as examples to support these views. Liberia’s EITI MSG did not operate consistently and effectively throughout the 2017-21 period under review. A governance crisis prompted by government interference in MSG nominations in 2018-19 following presidential elections caused a complete disruption in EITI implementation between September 2017 and April 2019. Following public outcry and intervention by the EITI Board, the government rectified the situation and ensured that each constituency was able to appoint representatives to the MSG. However, the absence of clear and public MSG nominations procedures from either industry or civil society creates a risk that external interference in constituency nominations procedures could potentially be repeated in future. While individual organisations solicited to appoint MSG members have internal procedures to appoint representatives, there is no indication that the nominations procedures are open to any member of the broader constituencies, such as mining companies at the exploration stage or civil society representatives that are not members of PWYP Liberia, the National Labor Congress or the Minerals Civil Society Organisation. In its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG highlighted the role of the National Civil Society Council Of Liberia (NCSCL), an umbrella group of CSOs, in helping to strengthen the nominations procedures for civil society and in overseeing the MSG election process organised by PWYP Liberia. However, it is unclear whether the nominations procedures followed by other CSOs represented on the MSG and by the mining industry constituency are open to all members irrespective of their affiliation to a particular organisation. The MSG appears to have provided effective oversight of the EITI reporting process since the resolution of the LEITI governance crisis in the second half of 2019, although the MSG’s outreach and dissemination was significantly affected by the governance crisis and the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic in this period (see Requirement 7.1). The MSG’s governance documents, the LEITI Act and the MSG’s Policy Manual that was last updated in February 2021, are broadly in line with provisions of the 2019 EITI Standard albeit without provisions related to gender considerations in MSG representation. In its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG noted that it had consistently conducted its business according to the LEITI Act, the MSG Policy Manual and the EITI Code of Conduct. The MSG has made efforts to improve members’ attendance at EITI meetings and to establish mechanisms for regular feedback from the broader constituencies, although these appear to have been implemented only by government and civil society to date, not by industry given delays due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The MSG’s policy for per diems is publicly codified, and the practices of per diem payments have been clarified in the MSG’s submission for this Validation and published on the LEITI website. The MSG’s decision-making has reverted to consensus decisions after a confrontational interlude in 2017-19, when most MSG decisions were taken by simple majority vote. However, while some civil society organisations like PWYP Liberia appear to have solicited input to the development of various LEITI documents such as the annual work plan from CSOs not directly represented on the MSG, there is little evidence of the practice of constituency consultations among other CSOs or in the industry constituency. While there appeared to be consensus among MSG members consulted that the objective of an independent MSG that can exercise active and meaningful oversight of all aspects of EITI implementation, balancing the three main constituencies’ interests in an equal manner, had been fulfilled, several stakeholders not directly represented on the MSG did not agree. Thus, while the MSG appears to have effectively overcome the governance crisis it faced in 2018-19, similar gaps appear to remain as in the previous Validation, which found that lines of accountability between MSG members and their broader constituencies were unclear. The Secretariat’s assessment is that Requirement 1.4 is mostly met.

Transparency

69.5 Fairly low
Scorecard by requirement
Assessment
Assessment of EITI Requirements

Validation assesses the extent to which each EITI Requirement is met, using five categories. The component score is an average of the points awarded for each requirement that falls within the component.

Overview of the extractive industries

3.1 Exploration data

90

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Liberia has fully met Requirement 3.1. Stakeholders consulted, in particular from industry, considered that the objective of a public overview of extractive industries had been fulfilled. The 12th LEITI Report provides an overview of the extractives sectors, including the key companies, the commodities, and a brief description of the projects. The report confirms the lack of new exploration activities in the oil and gas sector in 2018-19, but only notes that mining companies were requested to disclose information on their exploration activities (with none provided since the two material oil and gas companies did not report) Nonetheless, the report includes a recommendation for LEITI to build and maintain a database of ongoing exploration activities. Stakeholders consulted did not express particular views on whether the objective of a public overview of the extractives sectors in the country and their potential had been fulfilled. The Secretariat considers that the limited information on exploration activities in the 2018-19 EITI Report is reasonable given the lack of systematic collection of this information by LEITI to date and welcomes the recommendation for such oversight mechanisms to be developed. Thus, the Secretariat’s assessment is that there has been no back-sliding on Requirement 3.1 since the last Validation, when it was assessed as ‘satisfactory progress’.

6.3 Contribution of the extractive sector to the economy

75

The Secretariat's assessment is that Liberia has mostly met Requirement 6.3, with considerable improvements since the previous Validation. Stakeholders consulted did not express any particular views on whether the objective of ensuring a public understanding of the extractive industries’ contribution to the national economy, although some considered that Liberia EITI Reports were the most comprehensive source of public information. The 12th LEITI Report contains data, in absolute and relative terms, on the mining sector's contribution to GDP, government revenues, and exports. Additionally, it provides employment data disaggregated by gender and highlights the regions where there are potential and major ongoing extractive activities. Estimates on the contribution of the informal sector (mainly artisanal gold and diamond mining) are given both for production and exports, although the EITI Report does not reference credible third-party estimates for the contribution of informal extractive activities to the national economy (e.g., GDP), despite the fact that such credible third-party estimates do appear to be publicly available. The MSG’s comments on the draft assessment argue that the value of contributions from the informal sector, including from artisanal gold and diamond mining, are captured under the line on government revenues from ‘other companies’ in the 2018-19 EITI Report(p.18).While this data on government revenues from other companies may cover revenues from licensed artisanal and small-scale miners, it logically does not cover the contribution to GDP from informal extractive activities, which by definition are not licensed by the government.In addition, extractive employment data provided by the Ministry of Labour appears to cover only 12 of the 367 mining license-holding companies and only one of the five oil and gas companies operating in Liberia in 2018-19. Of greater concern, the 12th LEITI Report does not provide the oil and gas sector's contribution to GDP in absolute or relative terms, despite this being a key corrective action from the previous Validation. As highlighted in the MSG’s comments on this draft assessment, the EITI Report does however provide the value of government revenues from the oil and gas sector in absolute terms, from which their relative value can also be calculated based on data in the 2018-19 EITI Report. Thus, while all aspects of Requirement 6.3 have not yet been comprehensively addressed, the Secretariat’s view is that there have been considerable improvements in disclosures since the period reviewed in the previous Validation given the additional disclosures related to the oil and gas sector.

Legal and fiscal framework

2.1 Legal framework

90

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Liberia has fully met Requirement 2.1. Stakeholders consulted did not express particular views on the public accessibility of information on extractive laws and regulations. The 2018-19 EITI Report describes the legal environment and fiscal regime for the extractives, including the roles of government entities. The key laws and regulations related to the extractive industries are systematically disclosed on the Liberia Petroleum Regulatory Authority (LPRA) website for oil and gas and the Mines and Minerals and Energy (MME) website for mining. However, while the report provides an overview of ongoing reforms in the sectors, it does not provide a description of the nature of the reforms, particularly in the mining sector. Stakeholders consulted did not express any particular views on whether the objective of public understanding of the regulatory framework for the extractive industries had yet been achieved. There does not appear to have been back-sliding on Requirement 2.1, which was assessed as ‘satisfactory progress’ in the previous Validation.

2.4 Contracts

60

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Liberia has mostly met Requirement 2.4. Several stakeholders noted plans to undertake a standalone contract and license disclosure study to clarify any legal or regulatory barriers to disclosure. While stakeholders highlighted that many contracts had been published due to implementation of provisions of the LEITI Act, there had been no systematic review of publications since the production of a LEITI simplified contract matrix in 2015. Several stakeholders consulted expressed scepticism over whether all licenses, contracts and amendments had yet been published. The 12th EITI Report provides an overview of the applicable legal framework for extractive contract and license disclosure. The legal framework seems to largely support public dissemination of the contents of licenses and contracts, through the 2009 LEITI Act and Section 64 of the New Petroleum Act (2014). Hence, there do not appear to be explicit legal barriers to contract disclosure but certain readings of the LEITI Act of 2009 could render an interpretation that while the government will attempt to ensure the public disclosure of all contracts, contract disclosure is not legally binding through the 2009 LEITI Act. However, there is an extensive list of extractive contracts (including annexes, amendments and riders where applicable)published on the LEITI website, with specific reference to where each document is publicly accessible. It remains unclear whether all active extractive contracts have been published on the LEITI website to date however, given that the MSG has not yet published a comprehensive list of all active extractive contracts, clearly indicating which document has been published, with references to each publicly accessible document. There appear to have been 651 minerals and mining license awards between 1 January 2021 and February 2022, based on data available on the MCAS system,but it is unclear whether all of these licenses have been published to date. There is no evidence in the MCAS system of any new mining contract awards since January 2021 and the lack of new oil and gas contract awards since the start of 2021 was confirmed by all stakeholders consulted. It is unclear whether the MSG or government have a mechanism in place to ensure the systematic publication of the full text of newly awarded or amended extractive contracts and licenses. It is also unclear whether the full text of all extractive licenses, particularly those awarded since the start of 2021, are publicly disclosed. None of the stakeholders consulted could categorically confirm that all active extractive licenses and contracts have been publicly disclosed to date. While a legal and regulatory framework supporting the disclosure of extractive contracts appears to be in place, there is insufficient evidence of the MSG's comprehensive review of the public accessibility of all active extractive licenses and contracts, including annexes, amendments and riders where applicable. In its submission for this Validation, the MSG noted its plans to undertake a study of extractive license disclosure in 2022 to identify any regulatory or practical barriers to the disclosure of licenses.

6.4 Environmental impact

Not assessed

The Secretariat's assessment is that Requirement 6.4 remains not assessed, given that several encouraged aspects of this requirement remain to be addressed by Liberia EITI. Some stakeholders consulted noted that the 12th LEITI Report was a first attempt at extending coverage to the management of environmental impacts. While Liberia has used its EITI reporting to provide a cursory overview of relevant legal and contractual provisions related to environmental management and monitoring of extractive investments in the country, it has not yet expanded this to describe administrative rules and actual practices. There is no evidence that environmental impact assessments, certification schemes, environmental licences and rights granted to oil, gas and mining companies are publicly disclosed in Liberia at present. Liberia does not appear to have yet comprehensively disclosed information on regular environmental monitoring procedures, administrative and sanctioning processes of governments, as well as environmental liabilities, environmental rehabilitation and remediation programmes.

Licenses

2.2 Contract and license allocations

75

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Requirement 2.2 is mostly met. Most stakeholders consulted considered that the objective of providing a public overview of awards and transfers of oil, gas and mining licenses had been fulfilled, although several stakeholders off the MSG questioned the level of LEITI’s focus on documenting actual licensing practices. The 12th LEITI Report provides an overview of the 133 minerals and mining license awards and lack of transfers in 2018-19, as well as the lack of activity in the oil and gas sector. Liberia has used its EITI reporting to provide a description of the statutory procedures for awarding licenses in the mining sector, including the technical and financial criteria considered. The report provides an overview of the statutory procedure for transferring minerals and mining licenses but does not clarify the technical and financial criteria considered in the government's approval of transfers. In determining whether there were non-trivial deviations from the statutory provisions for awarding licenses in 2018-19, the MSG adopted a sampling of six license awards of different types of minerals and mining licenses. The inconsistencies in number of license awards between the cadastral portal and the 12th LEITI Report may be due to a number of reasons but have not been explained in EITI reporting. While the MSG’s diagnostic of the award practices for six different types of licenses in 2018-19, which concluded that there were no non-trivial deviations from statutory procedures in these awards, some stakeholders from all three constituencies raised concerns over the scope for deviations in the award of minerals and mining licenses, particularly in 2018-19 at the start of the new administration’s term in office. Other stakeholders, particularly from government, did not consider that there had been any non-trivial deviations in the period under review. Despite the lack of activity in the oil and gas sector, the 12th LEITI Report describes the statutory license award procedures in oil and gas, although not of procedures for transferring licenses or participating interests in oil and gas blocks. While the bid criteria for license awards in mining and oil and gas are sufficiently described, the report does not clarify whether there is any scoring or weighting of the technical or financial criteria assessed. Several stakeholders consulted considered that there were governance weaknesses in mining licensing practices, while other government stakeholders considered that LEITI Reports provided an adequate overview of the procedures for license awards and transfers and whether these procedures are followed in practice.

2.3 Register of licenses

90

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Requirement 2.3 is fully met despite minor technical gaps in disclosures. Several stakeholders from different constituencies considered that the objective of public accessibility of comprehensive information on property rights related to extractives licenses and contracts had been fulfilled. Most of the information listed in Requirement 2.3.b is systematically disclosed for all mining, oil and gas licenses. In the mining sector, the online repository of the Ministry of Mines and Energy (MME MCAS system) provides information on all active minerals and mining licenses, indicating the license holder name, dates of application, award and expiry, and commodity covered (where applicable). Both the MCAS system and the Liberia National Concession Map (Flexicadastre) contain information on license coordinates, for all active minerals and mining licenses. In the oil and gas sector, the Liberia National Concession Portal provides information on license holder(s) name, dates of award and expiry, and commodity produced. However, the application dates for three of the four active oil and gas contracts are not publicly accessible online, which include the contracts involving the two material oil and gas companies (ExxonMobil and Chevron) included in the scope of EITI reporting for 2018-19 (which have since been relinquished or expired).The Secretariat considers that the absence of publicly accessible dates of application for a majority of oil and gas blocks is of only marginal importance given that all oil and gas contracts and licenses have been relinquished or lapsed since 2019. Thus, the Secretariat recommends that the Board may wish to exercise its discretion to weigh minor gaps in the technical aspects of the requirement against fulfillment of the broader objective of Requirement 2.3, which the Secretariat considers to have been fully met.

Ownership

2.5 Beneficial ownership

30

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Liberia has partly met Requirement 2.5.None of the stakeholders consulted considered that the objective of enabling the public to know who ultimately owns and controls all companies operating in the country’s extractive industries had yet been fulfilled, with many stakeholders citing the lack of legal basis for the public disclosure of beneficial owners in sectors such as mining as a key barrier to progress. The MSG has approved a working definition of beneficial ownership and other key terms and the 12th LEITI Report clarifies that the 2009 LEITI Act, the 2014 Petroleum Act, and the 2018 amendments to the Business Corporation Act provide a legal framework for the government’s collection of beneficial ownership data from all companies incorporated in Liberia, regardless of their sector of activity. However, as highlighted in LEITI’s beneficial ownership study published in December 2021, there is no legal basis for ensuring the public disclosure of beneficial ownership data that is collected in the mining sector, although the LPRA’s new regulations on the disclosure of beneficial owners of oil and gas companies in March 2020 support public beneficial ownership disclosures in the oil and gas sector. Some stakeholders consulted from different constituencies raised concerns over the definition of “beneficial owner” in Liberian legislation, which did not appear to cover forms of non-equity control (e.g., through the use of nominee shareholders for instance).However, as highlighted in LEITI’s dedicated beneficial ownership report published in 2021, the definitions of beneficial owner in the Business Corporation Act, the LPRA and the draft Anti-Money Laundering and Countering Financing of Terrorism Act currently under development include definitions of beneficial owner that cover forms of non-equity control. Several government officials consulted highlighted plans for amendments to the Minerals and Mining Act, which were expected to include provisions for the disclosure of beneficial owners among other reforms. However, other stakeholders consulted considered that these amendments had been under development for some time and expressed scepticism about the pace of reform. While there is anecdotal evidence that the Liberia Business Register has started collecting beneficial ownership data, the only public disclosures to date have been through Liberia’s EITI reporting. The 12th LEITI Report discloses the beneficial ownership of two companies in the mining sector and three in forestry, but not for any companies in the oil and gas or agriculture sectors. While LEITI’s 2021 beneficial ownership report notes the LEITI Secretariat’s efforts to send beneficial ownership reporting templates to 372 companies in the mining, oil and gas, forestry and agriculture sector that were not included as material in the scope of the 12th LEITI Report, it is unclear from the report whether any additional data was collected or disclosed as a result of this work. Thus, it remains unclear from available documents and stakeholder consultations whether beneficial ownership data has been requested from all companies holding or applying for extractive licenses since 1 January 2020. The only disclosures to date cover two of the 367 companies holding minerals and mining licenses in 2018-19 and none of the five oil and gas companies active at the time. The MSG has published an assessment of the beneficial ownership disclosures made through Liberia’s EITI reporting in the 12th LEITI Report, although this only covers the 19 material companies included in the scope of the EITI Report. Stakeholder consultations noted that to date there has not been a review of beneficial ownership data collection and disclosures from all extractive companies. A review of minutes of MSG meetings and LEITI documents does not indicate that the MSG has yet discussed the extractive companies that it considers as ‘high risk’. Nevertheless, LEITI is currently working with relevant agencies and other stakeholders as part of the Opening Extractives programme to address the identified constraints to BO disclosures in Liberia. With regards to the public availability of shareholder (legal ownership) information for extractive companies, the Liberia Business Registry (LBR) operates a company register, although information on shareholders does not appear to be accessible online. Stakeholder consultations noted that it was possible to request shareholder information from the LBR but noted that the MSG had not requested legal ownership information on all extractive companies to date. Rather, Liberia has used its EITI reporting to disclose legal ownership information for some of the material companies included in the scope of reporting, although reporting company omissions mean that shareholders of all material companies have not yet been publicly disclosed. The 12th LEITI Report provides legal ownership information for only three companies in the mining sector, five in forestry,four in agriculture and none in oil and gas.

State participation

2.6 State participation

30

The Secretariat's assessment is that Liberia has partly met Requirement 2.6. Most stakeholders consulted did not express any views on whether the objective of ensuring an effective mechanism for transparency and accountability for well-governed extractive SOEs had been fulfilled given the lack of activity in the oil and gas sector. However, several stakeholders highlighted the public interest in the financial management of NOCAL and called for greater transparency on NOCAL through LEITI disclosures. The 12th LEITI Report describes the state-owned enterprise (SOE) in the oil and gas sector, NOCAL, and indicates relevant legal provisions related to its financial relations with the government. However, public documents do not provide information on the statutory rules regarding NOCAL's ability to retain earnings, reinvest, and secure third party (debt or equity) financing. The audit of NOCAL's financial statements for 2018-19 had not been completed at the time of preparation of the EITI Report and these have not yet been published as of the commencement of Validation. While the EITI Report confirms the lack of dividends and retained earnings by NOCAL in 2018-19, it does not provide information on the value of any reinvestments or third-party financing by NOCAL in the period under review. The report provides information on state and SOE ownership of equity interests in extractive companies, including the terms attached to equity participation, but does not provide a comprehensive list of participating interests held by NOCAL in different oil and gas projects. A government representative consulted explained that NOCAL was entitled to a 10% carried participating interest in all oil and gas PSCs, with an additional 5% participating interests reserved for citizen participation but noted that there was an online resource that tracked state participating interests in oil and gas projects, which isa moot point given the lack of active oil and gas projects at present. Liberia's EITI reporting has added value in highlighting deviations between rules and practices in the government's equity interests in different mining companies and describes the terms attached to those equity participations but raises significant concerns over the comprehensiveness of disclosures of state participations in the mining sector given the lack of systematic tracking of state participations in mining companies by government entities. Moreover, the 12th EITI Report does not refer to any changes in state participation in 2018-19, if applicable. Nonetheless, the report describes the sole government loan to NOCAL, including the loan terms, and confirms the lack of any other loan or guarantee from the government or SOE to any extractive companies. However, a government representative consulted explained that NOCAL had resorted to additional third-party funding in the period under review, raising a total of USD 2m in advances from its data provider TGS in 2018-19in order to finance its operations. The TGS loan was not covered by a sovereign guarantee, but rather by future proceeds of NOCAL’s data sales. The representative considered that the lack of EITI disclosures related to the TGS loan to NOCAL was an oversight. Some stakeholders noted that the SOE's use of the USD 1.5m loan from government that was still outstanding in 2018-19 remained unclear to the public. Liberia has started using EITI disclosures to clarify the rules related to NOCAL's corporate governance, although it has not yet expanded this to the practice of the SOE's corporate governance, nor to the rules and practices related to operating and capital expenditures, nor of procurement and sub-contracting.

4.2 In-kind revenues

Not applicable

The Secretariat's assessment is that Requirement 4.2 remains not applicable in the period under review. The 12th EITI Report explains that NOCAL is entitled to collect, market and sell the state's share of oil production in line with the terms of the production-sharing contract (PSC), which implies that there would be in-kind revenues in the oil and gas sector. However, the EITI Report confirms that there has been no oil and gas production in Liberia to date.There are no provisions for the state to collect in-kind revenues in the mining sector.

4.5 SOE transactions

Not applicable

The Secretariat's assessment is that Requirement 4.5 is not applicable in the period under review. There was consensus among stakeholders consulted that there were no transactions related to NOCAL in the period under review (2018-19). The 12th LEITI Report states that the national oil company, NOCAL, did not collect any extractive revenues nor make any dividend payment to the government in the period under review. While the EITI Report does not explicitly confirm the lack of government transfer to NOCAL in 2018-19, there is no evidence in the government's budget execution report of any government transfers to NOCAL in the period under review, which was confirmed in stakeholder consultations that indicated that NOCAL reimbursed the loan only after the period under review.

6.2 SOE quasi-fiscal expenditures

Not applicable

The Secretariat's assessment is that Requirement 6.2 is not applicable in Liberia in the period under review. Some stakeholders consulted considered that the objective of transparency in quasi-fiscal expenditures had been achieved, given the lack of revenues collected by NOCAL in the period under review. While others called for greater transparency in NOCAL’s spending, none highlighted any specific examples of NOCAL's quasi-fiscal expenditures in the period under review. A government official consulted strongly rejected the notion that NOCAL undertook any quasi-fiscal expenditures. The 12th LEITI Report contains the MSG’s definition of quasi-fiscal expenditures,which is in line with the definition in the EITI Standard and confirms that NOCAL was requested to disclose any such expenditures in 2018-19 but did not report any quasi-fiscal expenditures. However,the basis for MSG's assessment that Requirement 6.2 is not applicable remains unclear, in particular whether the IA reviewed any supporting documentation as a basis for this assessment. The IA confirmed in consultations that it had relied on NOCAL's reporting that there were no quasi-fiscal expenditures in this period. While it had reviewed NOCAL's audited financial statements for the previous year (2017-18) and had not identified any such quasi-fiscal expenditures, it conceded that it had not reviewed any documentation related to NOCAL's expenditures in 2017-18. Thus, the existence and materiality of any quasi-fiscal expenditures in 2018-19 remains in doubt,although most stakeholders highlighted the lack of revenues collected by NOCAL in 2018-19. The MSG's methodology for identifying quasi-fiscal expenditures in the 2018-19 EITI Report relied on self-reporting by the SOE.

Production and exports

3.2 Production data

60

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Liberia has mostly met Requirement 3.2. Most stakeholders consulted did not express particular opinions on whether the objective of ensuring public understanding of extractive commodities production levels and the valuation of extractive commodity output had been fulfilled and several stakeholders casted doubt on the comprehensiveness of production data in the 12th LEITI Report given the lack of production values. The 12th LEITI Report confirms the lack of oil and gas production and provides mining production volumes by each of the three mineral commodities (iron ore, gold, diamonds),by company, project, and region,although it does not provide production values. The report raises concerns over the comprehensiveness and accuracy of government production data, with production data disclosed in the report based on material companies’ EITI reporting. This means that mining production data in the EITI Report is based on only three mining companies’ reporting to the EITI, as well as gold and diamond dealers’ reporting of artisanal-mined gold and diamond production. Production figures from the Ministry of Mines and Energy are provided, although there are differences in production data for iron ore and artisanal-mined gold. However, production values are not disclosed in the 12th LEITI Report. Stakeholder consultations indicated that reporting companies had not agreed to disclose production values given that this data was considered commercially sensitive. While Liberia’s EITI reporting and submission for this Validation did not highlight the availability of other government production data, the Central Bank of Liberia’s bi-monthly statistical reports provide monthly disclosures of output volumes and values for the three main mineral commodities produced (see for instance the CBL’s January-February 2020 Liberia Financial Statistics). However, in consultations, the IA noted that it had not used this data source because CBL statistics were based on a calendar year while LEITI reporting was based on the July-June fiscal year. It is unclear why monthly CBL output data could not have been used to estimate fiscal year mineral production volumes and values. Although third-party sources such as the USGS Minerals Yearbook on Liberia indicate that other mineral commodities were produced in this period, these appear to consist of industrial minerals such as barite and stone.

3.3 Export data

90

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Liberia has fully met Requirement 3.3. Stakeholders consulted did not express any particular views on whether the objective of ensuring public understanding of extractive commodities export levels and the valuation of extractive commodity export had been fulfilled. The 12th LEITI Report discloses data on export volumes and values for three mineral commodities(iron ore, gold and diamonds), based on reporting companies’ disclosures to the EITI. These disclosures are disaggregated by company and project, aside from artisanal-mined gold and diamonds. The Central Bank of Liberia’s bi-monthly statistical reports provide monthly disclosures of export volumes and values for the three main mineral commodities exported (see for instance the CBL’s January-February 2020 Liberia Financial Statistics). The Secretariat’s view is that there is no evidence of significant back-sliding compared to the period reviewed under the previous Validation when Requirement 3.3 was assessed as ‘satisfactory progress’.

Revenue collection

4.1 Comprehensiveness

90

The Secretariat's assessment is that Liberia has fully met Requirement 4.1, in accordance with the "flexible" EITI reporting approved by the Board in May 2020. There was consensus among stakeholders consulted that the objective of comprehensive disclosures of government revenues from oil, gas and mining had been fulfilled. The 12th LEITI Report confirms that the MSG agreed on materiality definitions for revenue streams and companies with the revenue streams considered material listed in the report, with clear materiality thresholds indicated. The lack of description of all 29 material revenue streams in the 12th LEITI Report is only a minor concern. Given that the report was produced under the "flexible" approach, it relied on government unilateral disclosure of revenues from extractive companies, with a selection of the largest taxpaying companies being sent reporting templates for non-financial information (e.g., beneficial ownership data). All extractive companies and government agencies receiving material payments are identified and listed. While 2 of the 5 mining companies and both of the oil and gas companies selected to report additional information did not do so, this did not have an impact on the government's unilateral disclosure of revenues. The government has provided full unilateral disclosure of revenues -with the lack of revenue collection in 2018-19 by both LPRA and NOCAL confirmed in stakeholder consultations -from all 367 mining companies and 5 oil and gas companies in the country in 2018-19, albeit only disaggregated by receiving government agency, not by individual revenue stream. The IA explained in consultations that the LPRA had collected only a total of USD 100,000 in license fees related to the fiscal year 2018-19, but that these were excluded from the scope of disclosures in the 12th LEITI Report as they were received after the end of the period under review, in July 2019.The IA confirmed that oil and gas companies did not make payments specific to the oil and gas sector (application fees, surface rental) in 2018-19. The EITI Report contains an assessment by the IA on the comprehensiveness of EITI financial disclosures.The lack of description of material revenue streams in the 12th LEITI Report is a concern, although description of each revenue stream is available from previous EITI Reports and a review of the relevant laws and regulations.

4.3 Infrastructure provisions and barter arrangements

Not applicable

The Secretariat's assessment is that Requirement 4.3 is not applicable in Liberia in the period under review. Stakeholders consulted did not express any particular views on whether the objective of public understanding of infrastructure provisions and barter-type arrangements had been achieved, although several stakeholders expressed confusion over the 12th LEITI Report’s coverage of barter-type arrangements. The 12th LEITI report states that there were no infrastructure provisions or barter arrangements in the oil and gas sector in Liberia during the period under review. However, the report also notes that the MSG considered that five different Minerals Development Agreements (MDAs) included barter-type infrastructure provisions in accordance with Requirement 4.3. These consist of two MDAs (with Arcelor Mittal and China Union 2 Mining Co. respectively) that include contractual provisions for the company to develop rail and port infrastructure and another three MDAs (with BHP Billiton, Putu Iron Ore and Western Cluster respectively) that include provisions to develop all-weather roads for public use in the vicinity of the companies’ operations. However, all of these five MDAs are marked as 'not active', without further explanation. In consultations, the IA confirmed that it considered that these were all barter-type infrastructure provisions in accordance with Requirement 4.3 but noted that the companies had reported them as inactive without providing additional information. The IA noted that it had categorised these five MDAs as containing barter-type infrastructure provisions given that they were classified as such in previous LEITI Reports but that the relevant companies had indicated that the agreements were not active in 2018-19. However, an industry stakeholder consulted categorically stated that the Arcelor Mittal MDA did not include any barter-type infrastructure provisions in the sense of Requirement 4.3 and highlighted the company’s payment of a significant signature bonus upon signature of the MDA, which indicated that the infrastructure works were not pledged in lieu of fiscal payments associated with the award of mining rights. Thus, the existence of infrastructure provisions and barter types agreements are in dispute. While the MSG has sought to demonstrate that these agreements were not considered material in the period under review given that they were inactive, Liberia's EITI reporting has provided insufficient information to understand whether the infrastructure works in these five MDAs were agreed in full or partial exchange for oil, gas or mining exploration or production rights. Therefore, while Liberia has made progress on the corrective action related to Requirement 4.3 since the previous Validation, the precise terms of the barter-type infrastructure provisions of five MDAs remain unclear based on publicly available sources.The Secretariat’s view is that the infrastructure provisions in the five mining contracts (MDAs) highlighted in Liberia’s EITI Reports are not barter-type infrastructure provisions given that they were not in full or partial exchange of a counter-vailing benefit stream from government, such as mineral rights or the physical delivery of mineral commodities.

4.4 Transportation revenues

Not applicable

The Secretariat's assessment is that Requirement 4.4 remains not applicable in the period under review. The 12th LEITI Report confirms that there were no transportation payments related to extractive commodities collected by the government in the period under review.

4.7 Level of disaggregation

60

The Secretariat's assessment is that Liberia has mostly met Requirement 4.7. Most stakeholders consulted did not express particular views on whether the objective of enabling public oversight of the government’s monitoring of its extractive revenue collectionas defined by the legal and fiscal framework had been fulfilled, although the IA considered that this had been accomplished despite the disaggregation of all payments to government by individual license. The 12th LEITI Report presents government extractive revenue data that is disaggregated by individual company, government entity and revenue stream separately, but not disaggregated in all three ways in the same dataset. The report also contains the MSG's agreed definition of a project, which consists of an MDA or exploration license in the mining sector and of a PSC in the oil and gas sector. While the 12th LEITI Report states that all government extractive revenues are de facto levied on a per project basis given the EITI Report's perception that all extractive companies hold only one license or contract, evidence from the Ministry of Mines' cadastral portal indicates that several mining companies hold more than one license. There is no evidence that the MSG has published a list of projects that cover several substantially interconnected legal agreements. In consultation, the IA explained that the MSG had considered that all extractive companies only hold one license or contract but noted that the tax regime statutorily ring-fenced tax computations on a per license or contract basis. Consultations and a review of the mining cadastre also indicated that certain companies held several licenses. Therefore, while the MSG has made progress towards project-level reporting, all applicable government extractive revenue data does not appear to be presented disaggregated by project, company, revenue stream, and government entity at the same time.

4.8 Data timeliness

90

The Secretariat's assessment is that Liberia has fully met Requirement 4.8. While several stakeholders consulted raised concerns over the delays in publishing EITI Reports in the 2017-19 period, most stakeholders consulted considered that the objective of public disclosures of company payments and government revenues from oil, gas and mining in a sufficiently timely manner had been fulfilled with the latest EITI Report. Reporting delays had contributed to Liberia's temporary suspension by the EITI in September 2018. The suspension was lifted in March 2020 following improvements in the MSG's oversight of implementation (Requirement 1) and the publication of outstanding 2016-17 and 2017-18 EITI Reports in 2019. The 2018/2019 EITI Report was published two months ahead of the deadline, in April 2021. Evidence suggests that the MSG agreed the reporting period covered by the EITI Report. There is evidence that the MSG is undertaking procurement for the 13th and 14th LEITI Reports in early 2022, with a view to improving the timeliness of EITI reporting in Liberia.

4.9 Data quality and assurance

60

The Secretariat's assessment is that Liberia has mostly met Requirement 4.9. Most MSG members consulted expressed satisfaction at the reliability of financial data disclosed in Liberia’s EITI reporting, although several stakeholders considered that it was too early to assess whether data reliability had been maintained with the transition to the “flexible” EITI reporting. Consulted stakeholders’ opinions were split over whether the EITI was contributing to strengthening routine government and company audit and assurance systems and practices, with some stakeholders considering that the EITI recommendations were more focused on the process of EITI reporting rather than broader audit and assurance practices. Liberia produced its latest EITI Report (2018-19) based on the "flexible" EITI reporting approach agreed by the EITI Board in May 2020, based solely on government unilateral disclosure of extractive revenues without reconciliation with company payments. The MSG has approved this approach and agreed ToR for the EITI Report in line with the Board-approved "flexible" EITI Report ToR and appears to have approved the reporting templates. The 12th LEITI Report includes the IA's review of audit standards in the public and private sectors, albeit without any assessment of deviations from international audit standard nor with any description of the practice of government audit and assurances in 2018-19. The EITI Report describes the quality assurances agreed for government EITI reporting of revenues and confirms that all government entities adhered to these procedures in practice. While the 12th LEITI Report contains a statement from the IA that it considers the government extractive revenue data to be comprehensive and reliable, it does not include a clear statement about whether the government extractive revenue data has been subject to audits to international standards.Some of the information in the 12th LEITI Report does not appear to include clear sources for the data provided.In its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG argued that the assessment of Requirement 4.9 should be upgraded to fully met given that all reporting government entities submitted the quality assurances agreed by the MSG for EITI reporting covering 2018-19. However, the Secretariat’s view is that the lack of description of actual audit and assurance practices related to government accounts (and revenues specifically), combined with a lack of statement of whether the government revenues disclosed in the EITI Report were subject to audits inline with international standards, means that the objective of ensuring that appropriate measures have been taken to ensure the reliability of disclosures of government extractive revenues has been mostly met.

Revenue management

5.1 Distribution of revenues

60

The Secretariat's assessment is that Liberia has mostly met Requirement 5.1. Consulted stakeholders’ opinions were split over whether there were any extractive revenues collected by government entities that were not recorded in the national budget, despite the 12th LEITI Report’s categorisation of certain extractive revenues as not recorded in the national budget. There were thus differing views over whether the objective of ensuring traceability of extractive revenues to the national budget had yet been fulfilled. Those stakeholders who did consider that extractive revenues collected and retained by the NPA and EPA were not recorded in the national budget expressed scepticism over whether the objective of traceability of extractive revenues had been fulfilled. The 12th LEITI Report provides a description of which extractives sector revenues are recorded in the national budget and which are not recorded in the national budget, how they are collected, and where they are eventually remitted. However, while the report provides the value of government extractive revenues that are not recorded in the national budget, it also provides inconsistent information on whether the value of these off-budget revenues was comprehensively disclosed, given its statement that mining companies' contributions to the Scientific Research Fund were not comprehensively reported for 2018-19. Several government officials consulted strongly contested that mining companies’ contributions to the Scientific Research Fund and oil and gas companies’ contributions to the Rural Energy Fund (REFUND) and to the University of Liberia (UL) were not recorded in the national budget. There thus remains a lack of clarity over which specific extractive revenues are not recorded in the government’s budget. Nonetheless, the EITI Report confirms the lack of extractive revenues collected by NOCAL in 2018-19. Of greater concern, the 12th LEITI Report does not describe the management of the extractive revenues not recorded in the national budget, nor provide guidance on accessing financial reports describing the management of these funds. The 12th LEITI Report references national revenue classification systems. In its comments on the draft assessment, the MSG argues that the assessment of Requirement 5.1 should be upgraded to fully met, given that all government revenues from the extractive industries are collected in the Consolidated Fund Account (single Treasury account)and recorded in the national budget. However, the comments also imply that the flow-chart of off-budget extractive revenues in the 2018-19 EITI Report (p.120) is accurate. The flow-chart in the EITI Report categorises five types of extractive revenues collected by various government entities (LRA, NOCAL and the NPA) as “off-budget”, i.e., not recorded in the national budget. Thus, it does appear that there are five types of off-budget government extractive revenues, the management of which in practice does not appear to be comprehensively disclosed for 2018-19.

5.3 Revenue management and expenditures

Not assessed

The Secretariat’s assessment is that Requirement 5.3 remains not assessed in Liberia in the period under review, given that Liberia has made progress on some, but not yet all, of the encouraged aspects of Requirement 5.3. Several stakeholders from different constituencies called for more EITI disclosures on expenditures funded by extractive revenues, implying that they did not consider that the objective of strengthening public oversight of the use of extractives revenues to fund public expenditures had yet been fulfilled.The 12th LEITI Report provides information on the budget process, including the laws and policies guiding the process. It also contains links to publicly available information about the audit process. However, the 12th LEITI Report does not clarify whether or not there are any extractives revenues that are earmarked for specific programmes or geographic regions in Liberia and is also missing information on whether there is timely information from the government that would enhance public information and debate around issues of revenue sustainability and resource dependence.

Subnational contributions

4.6 Subnational payments

Not applicable

The Secretariat's assessment is that Requirement 4.6 remains not applicable in the period under review. This was confirmed by consensus among stakeholders consulted. The 12th LEITI Report confirms that there were no direct subnational payments by extractive companies in the period under review.

5.2 Subnational transfers

Not applicable

The Secretariat's assessment is that Requirement 5.2 remains not applicable in the period under review. This was confirmed by consensus among stakeholders consulted. The 12th LEITI Report states that the LEITI MSG agreed on the lack of sub-national transfers in the mining sector in 2018-19 and that there was no production in the oil and gas sector in this period. While the basis for the MSG's assessment is unclear from the 12th LEITI Report and appears based on the assessment of subnational transfers in previous years, the Secretariat understands that there has been no constitutional, legal or regulatory reforms since the previous Validation that introduced any type of subnational transfers of extractive revenues.

6.1 Social and environmental expenditures

60

The Secretariat's assessment is that Liberia has mostly met Requirement 6.1, without considerable improvements over the previous Validation. Opinions of stakeholders were split over whether the objective of assessing extractive companies’ compliance with their legal and contractual obligations to undertake social and environmental expenditures was being fulfilled. Most MSG members considered that EITI reporting was opening up the social and environmental aspects of the extractives, while other stakeholders considered that there was too little information on social expenditures in Liberia’s latest EITI Report. Many stakeholders consulted highlighted the public interest in social and environmental information. The 12th LEITI Report confirms that mandatory social expenditures are applicable in both mining and petroleum sectors, in accordance with clauses of the relevant contracts (MDAs and PSCs). While the EITI Report provides disclosures of mandatory social expenditures from the three material mining companies that participated in EITI reporting for 2018-19, the Secretariat's view is that these disclosures are not comprehensive of all mining, oil and gas companies' mandatory social expenditures in the period under review. The IA confirmed that it had included all social expenditures disclosed by reporting companies in the 2018-19 EITI Report. The 12th LEITI Report implies that companies are required to make environmental payments to government in relation to their environmental impact assessments, it does not provide a comprehensive description of the types of environmental payments to government that extractive companies are required to undertake. The report provides the EPA’s disclosures of annual environmental license fees collected from mining, oil and gas companies, as well as one mining company's (Bea Mountain Mining) disclosures of its payments to the EPA related to environmental audit fees. There is some confusion in the EITI Report between companies’ disclosures of their environmental payments to government and environment-related payments to other companies, including service providers and contractors. While the low level of mining, oil and gas company participation in EITI reporting for 2018-19 is covered under the comprehensiveness of disclosures (see Requirement 4.1), the low level of company reporting of social expenditures and EIA and environmental audit fees to the EPA implies that the objective of enabling public understanding of extractive companies’ social and environmental contributions is not yet fulfilled.


Key documents


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