Cameroon DRC Ghana Guinea Kazakhstan Kyrgyz Republic Mongolia Republic of the Congo Mali Mauritania Nigeria Peru 2007 Côte d’Ivoire Liberia Central African Republic Madagascar São Tomé and Príncipe Sierra Leone Timor-Leste 2008 * Rejoined the EITI Norway Tanzania Albania Mozambique Zambia 2009 Chad Togo Indonesia Afghanistan Iraq 2010 Burkina Faso Guatemala Trinidad and Tobago 2011 Honduras Philippines Senegal Ukraine Tajikistan 2013 Myanmar Seychelles Colombia United Kingdom Ethiopia Papua New Guinea 2014 Malawi 2015 Dominican Republic Germany 2016 Guyana Mexico Armenia Suriname 2017 Netherlands 2018 Argentina 2019 Uganda Ecuador Niger* 2020 Gabon* 2021 Angola 2022 Fostering country engagement Guinea Law L/2011/006/CNT on the promotion of transparency in the mining, oil and gas sectors (2011) Global implementation of the EITI Standard The EITI is an international, non-treaty bound organisation in which state and non-state actors work together, and governments play a critical role in leading the EITI process. In addition to driving the implementation of the EITI Standard, governments are also responsible for creating and implementing policies and regulations that promote transparency and accountability in the natural resource sector. This includes developing legal and regulatory frameworks that require disclosures of extractive activities and payments, as well as incorporating the EITI into legal frameworks through legislation or executive decrees. Many countries now have a legal basis for EITI implementation, making transparency and accountability central to the way in which natural resources are managed. Honduras General Mining Law (2013) Sierra Leone Mines and Minerals Development Act (2022) 10