It also said the rule – which requires some companies to report on their use of tantalum, tin, tungsten and gold – has likely had no effect in neighbouring countries.
“GAO found no empirical evidence that the rule has decreased the occurrence or level of violence in the eastern DRC, where many mines and armed groups are located,” the report said.
“GAO also found the rule was associated with a spread of violence, particularly around informal, small-scale gold mining sites,” it said, adding that gold is the most difficult to trace, and easiest to smuggle, of the four minerals covered by the rule.
Congo is the world’s top producer of tantalum, which is considered a critical mineral by the United States and the European Union.
The report added that “the SEC disagreed with some of GAO’s findings and raised concerns about some of its methodology and analyses.” The GAO said it made certain adjustments that did not materially affect its findings.
“As the agency noted in comments shared with GAO, SEC staff has serious concerns about the report, including that it makes assertions and reaches conclusions that rest on several erroneous factual assumptions, draws causal inferences that are not supported by GAO’s statistical analyses, and deviates significantly from the GAO’s previously issued reports,” the SEC said.
“GAO had not shared its final report with the SEC until today, so staff is reviewing it to determine if and how GAO addressed the SEC’s concerns,” it added.
Last year, GAO said that some US companies buying minerals from Congo and its neighbours were failing to meet disclosure requirements.
On Sept. 30, Bintou Keita, head of the UN mission in Congo, told the UN Security Council that M23 rebels in the east are generating $300,000 per month in revenues in a coltan-mining region they seized earlier this year.
(By Yassin Kombi, Sonia Rolley and Portia Crowe; Editing by Aurora Ellis)