TITLE:
Assessing Environmental and Social Safeguard Compliance in Zambia’s Mining Sector: A Case Study of Zambia Gold Company Mine
AUTHORS:
Mususu Kosta Mpongo Kaonda, Luputa Walusiku Neil
KEYWORDS:
ESG, Environmental and Social Safeguards, Zambia, Mining Governance, Resources Policy, State-Linked Mining, Community Engagement, Transparency, Safeguard Implementation, Regulatory Capacity
JOURNAL NAME:
Journal of Environmental Protection,
Vol.17 No.6,
June
18,
2026
ABSTRACT: Environmental, Social and Governance requirements have become increasingly important in mining governance, but their effectiveness depends on whether formal commitments are translated into operational practice, disclosed to affected stakeholders, independently monitored, and connected to corrective action. This article examines the implementation of environmental and social safeguards at Zambia Gold Mine, specifically Kansenseli Gold Mine, as a case study of ESG operationalisation in Zambia’s mining sector. The article addresses a central problem in extractive-sector governance: the gap between documentary compliance, represented by environmental assessment instruments, approval conditions, management plans and regulatory obligations, and substantive safeguard performance as experienced by stakeholders. The study is based on a pragmatic single-case-study design combining documentary analysis, semi-structured key informant interviews, focus group evidence, and a limited community perception survey. Evidence is analysed across three ESG dimensions: environmental management, social safeguards, and governance accountability. Institutional theory, stakeholder theory and political economy are used as complementary analytical lenses to explain why implementation gaps may persist despite the existence of formal safeguard systems. The findings indicate that safeguard commitments at Zambia Gold Mine are formally documented and partially operationalised through monitoring procedures, consultation processes and regulatory oversight. However, implementation remains uneven. Environmental monitoring is reported to occur, but monitoring results are not consistently disclosed to affected communities in accessible formats. Community engagement structures exist, but participation is mediated heavily through traditional leadership and does not always produce continuous, inclusive dialogue. Governance systems are formally present, but constrained by regulatory capacity limitations, fragmented accountability arrangements, limited public disclosure and the structural tensions associated with state-linked ownership. The article concludes that ESG performance in Zambia’s mining sector cannot be evaluated through documentary compliance alone. Strengthening safeguard effectiveness requires transparent disclosure of monitoring results, continuous stakeholder engagement, accessible grievance mechanisms, performance-based ESG indicators, stronger regulatory capacity and clearer institutional separation between state ownership interests and regulatory oversight. The case contributes to mining policy debates by showing that ESG implementation gaps arise not from the absence of formal safeguards, but from weaknesses in the implementation chain linking commitments, operational practice, disclosure, participation, verification and corrective action.