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Last reviewed: 28 June 2026
Any company planning to develop a mining project in Uganda must first secure an Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) certificate from the National Environment Management Authority (NEMA) before it can obtain, or in many cases even apply for, a mining licence from the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Development (MEMD) and the Directorate of Geological Survey and Mines (DGSM). Understanding how to get ESIA approval for mining in Uganda is therefore the single most important procedural prerequisite for project sponsors, in‑house counsel and environmental consultants entering the Ugandan minerals sector in 2026.
This guide maps the complete sequence, screening, scoping, baseline studies, public consultation, NEMA review and post‑approval licensing, against the Mining and Minerals Act, 2022, the National Environment Act and the 2026 regulatory reforms that have tightened thresholds and introduced new pre‑licence conditions. It provides the document checklists, indicative timelines, cost estimates and practitioner pitfall warnings that are absent from most regulator pages and consultancy summaries currently ranking in search results.
The ESIA procedure in Uganda is governed primarily by the National Environment Act and the regulations made under it, which designate categories of projects, including mining, that require environmental and social impact assessment before they may proceed. The Mining and Minerals Act, 2022 reinforces this by making ESIA certification a statutory precondition for the grant of exploration licences, mining leases and, under the 2026 regulations, even certain retention and artisanal licences where activities exceed defined thresholds.
The process follows a defined sequence: the developer submits a Project Brief to NEMA for screening; NEMA determines whether a full ESIA is required; if so, scoping and Terms of Reference (ToR) are agreed; multi‑disciplinary baseline studies and public consultations are carried out; the completed ESIA report is submitted through the NEMA ELMIS portal; NEMA conducts a technical review and site inspection; and, upon satisfaction, issues a Certificate of Approval with conditions. The developer then uses the certificate, together with a compliance record and an Environmental Management Plan (EMP), to support the mining licence application filed through the DGSM Mining Cadastre portal.
Do you need ESIA clearance before applying for a mining licence in Uganda? In almost all cases, yes. The Mining and Minerals Act, 2022 requires proof of environmental compliance as a condition precedent to the grant of a mineral right. The only limited exceptions relate to reconnaissance operations and very small‑scale prospecting activities that NEMA screens out as not requiring a full assessment, but even these require a screening determination from NEMA before the licence application can proceed.
Under the National Environment Act schedules, mining and quarrying activities are listed among projects that ordinarily require a full ESIA. NEMA applies a screening process to determine the appropriate level of assessment based on the type, scale, location and potential impact of the proposed activity. In practice, the categories relevant to mining sponsors are:
Both Ugandan and foreign‑incorporated entities may apply for ESIA clearance and mining licences. However, the Mining and Minerals Act, 2022 requires that a foreign company wishing to hold a mineral right must be registered in Uganda under the Companies Act and must designate a local agent or representative. Joint ventures between foreign investors and Ugandan entities are common and may attract preferential consideration under the state‑participation provisions of the Act. Foreign companies should also note the requirement for land access documentation, including surface‑right agreements and, where relevant, consent from lawful or bona fide occupants, before NEMA will accept an ESIA submission.
The following table summarises each step, the responsible party and the typical duration. The numbered sub‑sections below expand on each stage with practical compliance guidance.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 0. Pre‑project due diligence and siting | Developer + legal consultant + environmental lead | 2–6 weeks |
| 1. Screening, Project Brief submitted to NEMA (ELMIS) | Developer / EIA consultant | NEMA screening decision: 14–30 working days |
| 2. Scoping and Terms of Reference (ToR) approval | EIA consultant / NEMA (public scoping) | 2–8 weeks |
| 3. Baseline studies and full ESIA report preparation | Multi‑disciplinary EIA consultants | 3–6 months (project‑scale dependent) |
| 4. Public consultation and disclosure | Developer + consultants | 4–8 weeks (often runs in parallel with Step 3) |
| 5. ESIA report submission to NEMA (ELMIS) | Consultant / Developer | NEMA review period: approximately 60–120 working days |
| 6. NEMA technical review, field validation and site inspection | NEMA + consultant | 2–8 weeks (within the review period) |
| 7. NEMA decision, Certificate of Approval issued with conditions | NEMA | 1–4 weeks after final clearance |
| 8. Mining licence application to MEMD / DGSM Cadastre | Developer / legal adviser | Statutory windows under Mining and Minerals Act, 2022 |
Before any formal ESIA filing, the developer and legal team should complete a desktop review covering stakeholder mapping, land‑rights verification (searches at the Ministry of Lands), preliminary identification of environmentally sensitive receptors and an initial assessment of whether the proposed site falls within a protected area. This stage also includes confirming company registration in Uganda, engaging an accredited EIA lead consultant and establishing a community‑liaison function. Early engagement with experienced Ugandan mining counsel at this stage reduces the risk of procedural mis‑sequencing later.
The developer or its EIA consultant prepares a Project Brief, a structured summary of the proposed mining activity, location coordinates, scale, anticipated environmental and social effects and proposed mitigation measures, and submits it through the NEMA ELMIS portal. NEMA uses the Project Brief to screen the project and decide whether a full ESIA is required. For mining projects, NEMA’s screening determination is typically issued within 14–30 working days of a complete submission.
Where NEMA determines that a full ESIA is necessary, the authority issues or approves Terms of Reference that define the scope of the assessment. Public scoping, including stakeholder notification and scoping meetings in the project area, is increasingly required for medium and large mining operations under the 2026 reforms. The developer must hire a multi‑disciplinary team of accredited EIA consultants to conduct the studies set out in the ToR. Scoping and ToR approval typically takes 2–8 weeks.
This is the most resource‑intensive step. The consultant team carries out field‑based baseline studies covering biophysical conditions (water quality, air quality, soil, biodiversity, noise), socio‑economic profiles (livelihoods, land use, cultural heritage), hydrology, and mine‑specific technical parameters (waste‑rock characterisation, tailings geochemistry, closure planning). The output is a comprehensive ESIA report that includes an Environmental Management Plan (EMP), a non‑technical summary for community disclosure, and, where resettlement or displacement is anticipated, a Resettlement Action Plan (RAP). Depending on the scale and complexity of the project, this phase takes 3–6 months.
Public consultation is a statutory requirement and, in practice, one of the most scrutinised elements of the ESIA procedure Uganda 2026. The developer must conduct community meetings in the project‑affected area, disclose the ESIA findings in accessible formats (including local‑language translations), record attendance and comments, and establish a grievance mechanism. Minutes must be signed by attendees and translated where necessary. Under the 2026 reforms, higher consultation thresholds apply to projects classified as medium or large scale, and NEMA may require evidence that consultations covered not only directly affected communities but also downstream populations and civil‑society stakeholders.
The completed ESIA report, together with the EMP, non‑technical summary, public consultation records and supporting technical annexes, is submitted to NEMA through the ELMIS portal. Reports should be formatted in PDF/A, with maps showing project boundaries in both national grid and latitude/longitude coordinates. Hard copies may also be required for district‑level offices. Upon acceptance of a complete submission, NEMA commences its formal review period.
NEMA reviews the ESIA report against the approved ToR, conducts a technical evaluation and typically carries out a field visit and site inspection. The authority may raise queries or request supplementary information, for example, additional water‑quality sampling, biodiversity transect data or clarification of the mine‑closure plan. Response times to NEMA queries are critical: delays in providing supplementary data can extend the review period significantly.
If NEMA is satisfied that the ESIA is adequate and that the proposed mitigation measures are sufficient, it issues a Certificate of Approval with conditions. These conditions, which are binding and may be enforced through compliance orders, typically cover monitoring obligations (air, water, noise), reporting frequency, community development commitments, progressive rehabilitation and mine‑closure bonding. The certificate is valid for a specified period and is subject to review and renewal.
With the NEMA certificate in hand, the developer proceeds to file the mining licence application through the DGSM Mining Cadastre portal. The application pack must include the ESIA certificate, proof of compliance with NEMA conditions, the approved EMP, evidence of land access and the technical work programme required by the Mining and Minerals Act, 2022. Under the 2026 regulations, MEMD may impose additional pre‑licence environmental compliance conditions that must be satisfied before the licence is granted. Industry observers expect that this additional step will add 2–4 weeks to the licence‑issuance timeline for projects that were previously processed on a simpler administrative track.
The following table sets out the documents needed for ESIA mining applications in Uganda, with notes on the issuing authority, recommended format and practical tips. Developers should treat this as a working checklist and confirm requirements against the current NEMA guidance available on the ELMIS portal.
| Document | Notes (issuer, format, validity) |
|---|---|
| Project Brief (screening form) | Submitted via NEMA ELMIS. Includes: activity description, location coordinates (national grid + lat/long), proponent details, preliminary impact summary. |
| Terms of Reference (ToR) for ESIA | Approved by NEMA after scoping exercise. Must follow NEMA ToR template and include mine‑specific study items. |
| Full ESIA report (with Non‑Technical Summary) | Prepared by accredited EIA consultants. Format: PDF/A, maps at suitable scale. Includes baseline data, impact analysis, mitigation plan, EMP and closure plan. |
| Environmental Management Plan (EMP) | Integral part of ESIA. Must specify mitigation measures, monitoring indicators, institutional responsibilities and budget. |
| Social Impact Assessment and Resettlement Action Plan (RAP) | Required where physical or economic displacement is anticipated. Must include a project‑affected persons (PAPs) register and livelihood‑restoration plan. |
| Biodiversity and ecosystem assessment | Mandatory where project is in or near protected areas. Coordinated with UWA and MWE. Include species inventories and habitat mapping. |
| Water use / hydrology permits and consent | Applied for via Ministry of Water and Environment. Include water‑sampling data, abstraction estimates and waste‑water management plan. |
| Proof of land access (leases, wayleaves, MOUs) | Title documents, landowner agreements, consent letters. See our guide on transferring land title in Uganda. |
| Mining project technical reports | Geological reports, resource/reserve estimates, technical work programme. Required by MEMD/DGSM for the mining licence application. |
| Public consultation records | Signed attendance lists, meeting minutes, photographs, local‑language translations and grievances register. |
| Consultant credentials and proof of registration | CVs of lead and specialist consultants, firm registration documents, evidence of NEMA accreditation. |
| Payment proofs (application fees) | Receipts for NEMA screening and review fees and any other regulatory payments. Retain copies for the DGSM application pack. |
All reports should use standard Ugandan map projections and include georeferenced shapefiles where possible. NEMA’s ELMIS portal imposes file‑size limits on uploads; large annexes (geological data, photo registers) should be cross‑referenced and submitted as separate attachments with clearly labelled filenames, for example, ESIA_ProjectName_Annex4_BiodiversityReport_2026.pdf.
End‑to‑end, the ESIA process for a medium‑to‑large mining project in Uganda typically takes 8–18 months from the initial Project Brief submission to the issuance of the NEMA Certificate of Approval. The total elapsed time depends on project complexity, the responsiveness of the developer to NEMA queries and the thoroughness of public consultation. Adding the subsequent mining licence application through DGSM extends the overall timeline by a further period governed by the statutory windows in the Mining and Minerals Act, 2022.
The critical path runs through baseline studies (3–6 months) and the NEMA review period (approximately 60–120 working days). Sponsors can shorten the overall timeline by running public consultation in parallel with baseline studies, pre‑clearing land‑access documentation during the scoping phase, and preparing the DGSM mining licence application pack concurrently with the NEMA review so that filing can occur promptly upon certificate issuance.
The 2026 reforms introduce an additional procedural checkpoint: a pre‑licence environmental compliance certificate that MEMD may require before finalising a mining licence grant. Early indications suggest this adds 2–4 weeks to the post‑ESIA licensing timeline. Sponsors should factor this into their project schedules and financing timetables.
| Phase | Indicative duration | Key scheduling note |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑project due diligence | 2–6 weeks | Complete before NEMA filing. Secure land access and consultant contracts. |
| NEMA screening | 14–30 working days | Clock starts on complete Project Brief submission via ELMIS. |
| Scoping and ToR | 2–8 weeks | Public scoping now required for medium/large projects (2026 reforms). |
| Baseline studies and ESIA preparation | 3–6 months | Longest single phase. Plan for seasonal sampling needs. |
| Public consultation | 4–8 weeks | Run in parallel with studies to save time. Ensure translations are ready. |
| NEMA review and field validation | 60–120 working days | Respond to queries promptly, delays here extend the review clock. |
| Certificate of Approval issuance | 1–4 weeks | Conditions must be reviewed by legal counsel before acceptance. |
| DGSM mining licence application (post‑ESIA) | Statutory windows per licence type | Pre‑licence compliance certificate may add 2–4 weeks (2026 reforms). |
Costs associated with the ESIA procedure Uganda 2026 fall into two categories: statutory fees payable to NEMA and DGSM, and professional and operational costs incurred in commissioning and managing the assessment. The table below provides indicative ranges; statutory fee amounts should be confirmed directly with NEMA and DGSM against their current published fee schedules, as these are subject to periodic revision.
| Item | Indicative amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| NEMA screening fee | Statutory schedule (confirm with NEMA) | Payable via ELMIS on submission of the Project Brief. |
| NEMA ESIA review fee | Statutory schedule (confirm with NEMA) | Varies by project category and scale. Payable on ESIA report submission. |
| Consultant ESIA cost (small‑scale project) | USD 15,000–50,000 | Scope‑dependent. Includes lead EIA consultant and limited specialist input. |
| Consultant ESIA cost (large mining project) | USD 150,000–800,000+ | Multi‑disciplinary teams, months of fieldwork, specialist biodiversity and hydrology studies. |
| Public consultation and translation costs | USD 2,000–25,000 | Depends on number of communities, logistics and translation requirements. |
| Annual monitoring and compliance budget | USD 10,000+ | Post‑approval obligation. Often specified in NEMA conditions and licence terms. |
| DGSM mining licence application fee | Statutory schedule (confirm with DGSM) | Varies by licence type (exploration, mining lease, artisanal). Payable via the Mining Cadastre portal. |
On the tax side, consultant fees for ESIA services are subject to VAT at the standard rate and withholding tax obligations may apply to payments made to non‑resident service providers. Capital expenditure on environmental studies may qualify for tax deductions under the Income Tax Act, subject to the rules applicable to mining operations. Sponsors should obtain specific tax advice, the Uganda tax changes 2026 practical guide provides a useful overview of the current tax landscape affecting mining investors.
The 2026 regulatory cycle has introduced several changes that directly affect how developers obtain ESIA approval for mining in Uganda. These changes stem from the operationalisation of subsidiary instruments under the Mining and Minerals Act, 2022 and from updated NEMA and MEMD policy positions.
Key changes include:
Developers preparing an ESIA in 2026 should instruct their consultants to include additional items in the ToR and report: mineral‑chain traceability where applicable, quantified social indicators aligned with community development agreements, and detailed mine‑closure financial provisioning. Legal review of the MEMD 2026 regulations should be completed before ToR finalisation. For broader context on evolving Ugandan employment and labour compliance requirements that affect mining operations, see the Uganda employment law changes 2026 overview.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Denis Kusaasira at ABMAK Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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