Norway: Norway is the first country to have fully mainstreamed disclosures required by the EITI. Timely, comprehensive and reliable information on the oil and gas sector is published through the government’s Norwegian Petroleum website and in companies’ country-by-country reports. Contracts can be requested through an e-information platform and shareholder information through the tax office. Philippines: The Philippines systematically discloses information about the legal and licensing framework, as well as production and exports. State-owned enterprises disclose much of the information required by the EITI on their websites and in their financial statements. Indonesia: In 2022, Indonesia moved to partially mainstream its EITI implementation, thereby committing to disclose at source much of the data required by the EITI, including on licenses, production and revenues. Transparency at source The EITI Open data policy envisioned that transparency should be an integral and systematic part of extractive sector management. To this end, it encouraged countries to work towards disclosing data required by the EITI Standard directly through government and company systems. This approach of “mainstreaming” the EITI would allow countries to build on their existing reporting mechanisms and reduce the burden, cost and duplication of data in standalone EITI Reports. This approach of systematic disclosure was later enshrined in the 2016 EITI Standard, which encouraged countries to consider automated online disclosure of revenues and payments by governments and companies on a continuous basis. In 2018, systematic disclosure became the default expectation for data reported through the EITI, and several countries began to conduct feasibility studies on embedding EITI disclosures in government and company systems. As a result, EITI implementing countries are increasingly disclosing data at source through government and company databases, online registries, websites and portals. Today, about a quarter of data reported through the EITI is disclosed systematically, allowing for multi-stakeholder groups to shift their focus from data collection to data use, analysis and debate. Many countries have developed portals for reporting information such as beneficial owners, contracts and licenses, which centralise data collection and publication. Malawi 18% Tanzania 16% Philippines 88% Afghanistan 80% Seychelles 56% Mongolia 50% Myanmar 2% 25 Twenty years of extractives transparency