UK and UNDP Strengthen Role of Civil Society in EITI
June 11, 2026
Honiara, Solomon Islands – The UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the British High Commission in Honiara successfully hosted a Training-of-Trainers Programme for Civil Society Umbrella Group on the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) Implementation, Monitoring and Reporting in Solomon Islands.
Representatives from the Civil Society in Solomon Islands with key partners and stakeholders attended the programme on 5 June, marking a practical and timely step in strengthening transparency, accountability and inclusive participation in the governance of Solomon Islands’ extractive sector.
The EITI is a global standard for promoting open and accountable management of oil, gas, and mineral resources. Countries that adopt the EITI standard commit to full disclosure of the revenues governments receive from extractive companies, the payments those companies make to government, and how those revenues flow through public finances.
The core principle is that citizens should be able to see what their natural resources are worth, what companies are paying to extract them, and where that money goes.
Participants during the Training-of-Trainers Programme.
Deputy British High Commissioner to Solomon Islands, Melissa Williams, said this training served as an important opportunity to strengthen the role of civil society with the EITI, promoting transparency, accountability and informed public dialogue in the extractive sector.
“It brings together partners and stakeholders at a timely moment, as Solomon Islands works to reinforce the systems, capacities and relationships needed for more effective governance of natural resources,” she said.
Ms. Williams added that this programme is especially important because it focuses on the role of civil society.
“Effective transparency does not begin and end with institutions publishing information. It becomes meaningful when people are able to understand that information, ask informed questions, identify concerns, and engage constructively in public discussion,” she said.
Participants during the Training-of-Trainers Programme.
UNDP Pacific Office Project Lead for EITI in Solomon Islands, Florica Dragomir, said:
“The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative provides a globally recognised framework for ensuring that the revenues governments receive from extractive industries are visible, verifiable, and publicly accountable. But the framework only works if civil society is genuinely at the table, not as observers but as active participants in scrutinising the data and demanding accountability. UNDP's role is to help build the institutional architecture for that process and to ensure that the communities most affected by extractive activity have the capacity and the access to make transparency meaningful rather than procedural.”
Support to EITI in Solomon Islands is made possible thanks to the people and Government of the United Kingdom.
For media inquiries, please contact:
Florica Dragomir, Project Lead for EITI in Solomon Islands | UNDP Pacific Office | (E) florica.dragomir@undp.org