THE VOICE OF THE CANADIAN

MINING INDUSTRY SINCE 1935

Search
Close this search box.

TSM Climate Change Protocol

The purpose of this TSM protocol is to facilitate continual performance improvements in the mining sector related to the management of climate-related risks and opportunities, including associated mitigation and adaptation strategies, target-setting and reporting.

The purpose of this TSM protocol is to facilitate continual performance improvements in the mining sector related to the management of climate-related risks and opportunities, including associated mitigation and adaptation strategies, target-setting and reporting. Implementation of this protocol is intended to support companies, at both the corporate and facility levels, in advancing the goals of the Paris Agreement.1 The Paris Agreement aims to strengthen the global response to the threat of climate change by keeping a global temperature rise this century at well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels and by pursuing efforts to limit the temperature increase even further to 1.5°C. This protocol is also intended to align with the Recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures,2 which aim to improve the ability to appropriately assess and price climate-related risk and opportunities.

Related Resources

Mining News  | 
La Asociación Colombiana de Minería (ACM) se comprometió  a trabajar hacia una minería sostenible.

Popular Resources

Report  | 
MAC’s annual flagship publication detailing the latest trends in the Canadian mining industry.

Canadian Mining Stories

The sector is a major economic driver in our Canadian economy and a great contributor to jobs and leading technologies and here are our stories. 

Cameco / Cannorth

Supporting Indigenous businesses makes our business better. Canada North Environmental Services (CanNorth) is an Indigenous-owned company. CanNorth was established through the support of Cameco and other uranium mining companies in...

Darlene Gazandlare

As the Community Liaison for Hatchet Lake Denesuline First Nations, Cameco Corporation’s Darlene Gazandlare helps community members seek employment within the mining industry and does school presentations on the many...

Subscribe to MAC News

"*" indicates required fields

Name

*Indicates a required field

You can unsubscribe from these communications at any time. For more information on how to unsubscribe, our privacy practices, and how we are committed to protecting and respecting your privacy, please review our Privacy Policy.

By clicking submit, you consent to allow The Mining Association of Canada to store and process the personal information submitted above to provide you the content requested.