A practical guide for Indigenous Peoples in Guyana Table 1: Information that may be needed (continued) Information Needed Project Impacts Questions to be Answered 1. Will an ESIA be done? 2. What kind of ESIA? 3. What standards will the consultants follow? 4. How can our people be involved? 5. How will/could rights and freedoms be affected? 6. What will the environmental impacts be? 7. What will the social and livelihood impacts be? 8. What will/could be the effects on our Amerindian way of life? 9. How will they affect groups differently, like men and women? 10. What is the company’s or the government’s plan to avoid these impacts? 11. What emergency plans exist? Why they are Important 1. Some types of projects may not require an impact assessment under Guyanese Law. They might, however, be required to do so under international law and “best practice” standards; 2. Companies will often try to “fragment” the ESIA process into smaller parts, or do separate assessments for different parts of a project. For example, a mine, the dam that will power it, or the road that will lead to it. This is wrong because it does not consider the “cumulative” or collective impacts that those projects will together have on our territory; 3. See the guide on Indigenous participation in Environmental and Social Impact Assessments. We have a right to be involved, so we need to insist that we are! Sources of Information Material from and meetings with the proponent or the consultants they hire to do the ESIA; The draft ESIA; Our own community studies on impacts or interviews with key groups in the community; Reviewing reports about impacts in other Indigenous communities — from the media or Internet; Visits to affected communities; Company plans. 24

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