Uranium mining in Niger

ReCom study on environmental governance in Niger published in World Development

The role of development cooperation in fostering improved environmental governance of extractive industries in African countries exposed to the expanding global uranium frontier remains ambiguous. With primary data, this paper demonstrates how foreign aid to Niger has ignored grievances on grave environmental impacts and rampant institutional failures while a crisis discourse on desertification and food insecurity diverts attention from geopolitical interests in mineral wealth. We argue that aid delivery remains insufficient to address structural deficiencies cemented by decades of investment-friendly ‘politics of mining’ and conclude that domestic reforms must be backed by stronger transnational accountability mechanisms to overcome corporate impunity.

The article Rasmus Kløcker Larsen and Christiane Alzouma Mamosso."Aid with Blinkers: Environmental Governance of Uranium Mining in Niger”is published in World Development and is based on the ReCom study “Environmental governance of uranium mining in Niger. A blind spot for development cooperation?”.

For more information about the DIIS ReCom study on Environmental Governance and Development Coperation, please see or contact Helle Munk Ravnborg, who coordinated the Study.

DIIS Experts

Helle Munk Ravnborg
Sustainable development and governance
Senior Researcher
+4525471657