Guaranteeing the legal and operational viability of projects in the infrastructure or mining sector depends directly on the technical quality of their environmental studies. Preparing Environmental Impact Assessments (EIA) requires precise characterizations of the abiotic, biotic, and socioeconomic environments to predict alterations and structure solid management measures.
From the EIA, Environmental Management Plans (EMP) are derived, which are mandatory and establish operational guidelines to prevent, mitigate, correct, or compensate for generated impacts. Rigor in formulating the EMP prevents work suspensions, fines from environmental authorities, and socio-environmental conflicts in the territory.
To ensure traceability during the construction and operational phases, developing audits, environmental oversight, and Environmental Compliance Reports (ICA) is essential. These monitoring mechanisms guarantee that the contractor or concessionaire faithfully executes what was licensed, maintaining the validity of granted permits.
Finally, managing the volume of geospatial data generated in these studies requires advanced technological tools. Implementing and managing the MAG (Geographic Storage Model - Geodatabase) standardizes environmental information, facilitating spatial analysis, territorial risk assessment, and the delivery of official cartography to the regulatory authority.