Story of Change
An innovative pathway for small-scale gold mining in Colombia
The Need for an innovative pathway
This is unfolding in gold-mining territories that are vital to rural livelihoods and local economies, yet formal small-scale mining still needs greater visibility, trust and stability. High compliance costs limited technical capacity, weak institutional coordination, security risks, environmental management, traceability, and the inclusion of women and vulnerable populations remain key challenges.
At the same time, this is a moment of opportunity. Colombia’s evolving formalisation efforts, policy frameworks, and experience in responsible sourcing create fertile ground for innovative solutions, long-term stakeholder engagement, and sustained collaboration.
Table of Contents
Our Approach
Our approach is designed to move actors from fragmented understanding toward more coordinated, informed, and practical collective action. It follows a gradual pathway of change structured around progressive stages, also understood as intermediate objectives. By strengthening relationships and fostering evidence-based dialogue, the process will enable collaborative solutions for more responsible and sustainable gold value chains.
The first stage during 2025, “creating the conditions for action by building interest and understanding about SSM challenges and opportunities,” creates shared evidence base and enables more meaningful dialogue among involved stakeholders. Building on this common ground, the second stage, “Capacity building to promote collective engagement toward responsible, sustainable, and competitive mining,” strengthens the ability of formal miners and stakeholders to apply responsible practices, standards such as CRAFT, and risk-informed approaches.
The third stage, planned for 2026, “Promoting mining associativity among SSM as a path to good governance and sustainability,” is expected to consolidate stronger cooperative and miner networks. The fourth stage, “Fostering relationships among Small-Scale Miners and Large Gold Companies with a focus on territorial development and women miners’ leadership,” will translate these capacities into practical collaboration for sustainability, business improvement, and inclusion.
Training in Buritica, 2025
Progress & Results
The programme’s first stage has helped create the conditions for action around formal small-scale gold mining. Conversations that were previously limited are now more informed and constructive, supported by clearer evidence and focused on practical issues such as formalisation, traceability, and due diligence. These efforts are also helping build the trust needed for more coordinated action.
In the Colombian context, formal small-scale gold mining has remained largely invisible in policy and public debate, with very limited specialised information available. To help fill this gap, MARS, through its implementing partner ARM, promoted an initial assessment to provide a common reference point, gain a deeper understanding of the sector’s challenges and opportunities, and guide a more informed discussion among relevant stakeholders.
The presentation of the study’s findings in Medellín brought together 40 stakeholder representatives, 65% of whom were women. Participants included government authorities, mining companies, women’s organisations, MAP (Most Affected Populations) representatives, academia, and other key small-scale mining actors. In parallel, this activity was complemented by other territorial exchanges and capacity-building actions, including the Women in Mining training programme on Supply Chain and Risk Management, which trained 18 women, and webinars on formalisation, RBC, due diligence, and traceability, which reached more than 476 participants.
Together, these activities contributed to two early results. First, they helped raise awareness of the need to promote women’s leadership and participation in governance and decision-making spaces within Colombia’s gold mining sector, which has traditionally been shaped mainly by men in technical and institutional representative roles. Second, they helped move the process from general concerns to the identification of priority areas for the next stage of capacity-building and collaboration, including associativity, safety, sustainability standards such as CRAFT, and collaboration and coexistence between large-scale and small-scale mining.
To further develop these prioritised areas for strengthening, MARS has established a strategic partnership with the Colombian Mining Association’s (ACM) Small-Scale Mining Chamber. This partnership provides a legitimate and representative channel to engage directly with mining operators, while opening a space to examine how sustainability frameworks for large-scale mining, such as Towards Sustainable Mining (TSM), can be better connected with the CRAFT Code as a practical reference for formal small-scale miners. It also positions the Chamber as a technically grounded partner to support capacity-building, advocacy, and stronger operational articulation between small- and large-scale mining.
Formalization of a partnership between MARS the mining company Aris Mining, during the Roundtable for Development and Sustainability in Manizales, Caldas. This agreement is a important part of promoting responsible small-scale gold mining and the empowerment of women in mining territories, in coordination with local stakeholders.
In Short
- In Colombia, formal small-scale gold mining is a long-standing community vocation with strong potential to support rural livelihoods and national development, yet it remains held back by high compliance costs, limited technical capacity, weak institutional coordination, and persistent environmental and traceability challenges.
- A gradual relational shift was observed, as actors who rarely engaged began to see themselves as part of a shared conversation, supporting more constructive dialogue and opening space for stronger participation of women leaders
Lessons Learnt
- Credibility, neutrality, and sustained engagement are essential to building trust, reducing concerns about duplication, and enabling collaboration among the stakeholders involved.
- Shared evidence helps diverse actors align around a common agenda and move from general concerns to more practical discussions on formalisation, RBC, traceability, due diligence, and women’s participation.
- Early international interest, including engagement from Business Sweden, points to emerging opportunities to connect formalisation and RBC efforts with technology, innovation, and future partnerships.
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