In the regulatory environment of mining, decisions issued by the National Mining Agency (ANM) or the Ministry of Mines and Energy (MME) can directly impact the continuity of a project. In this scenario, the Administrative Appeal emerges not only as a right, but as the most agile and effective defense instrument for the preservation of mining rights.
Unlike other corrective measures, the appeal is the ordinary route of contestation — the first shield against acts that could harm the technical or legal viability of an enterprise. It represents the right of the interested party to contest decisions, seeking their reform, annulment, or modification based on solid technical and legal grounds.
The appeal is based on the constitutional principles of contradictory and full defense. Its application is governed by the Federal Administrative Procedure Law (Law 9.784/99) and ANM Resolution No. 122/2022. For the defense to be effective, it is necessary to observe the following criteria:
- Peremptory Deadline: The deadline for filing is 10 (ten) business days after the knowledge of the decision. The loss of this deadline entails preclusion, extinguishing the right to discuss the matter through the common appellate route.
- Independence of Preparation: As a rule, filing an appeal in the mineral sector does not require the payment of fees or deposits, facilitating access to the reexamination of the matter.
- Technical Foundation: The success of an appeal depends on the solidity of the evidence presented. This translates into Expert Reports, maps, geological data, and field evidence that technically confront the appealed decision.
The Hierarchical Flow of the Appeal
The appellate rite has a hierarchical nature and obeys a specific flow of appreciation, allowing the administration itself to correct any mistakes:
| Stage | Procedure | Purpose |
| Interposition | Filing before the authority that issued the original decision. | Official start of the proceedings and suspension of preclusive deadlines. |
| Reconsideration | Analysis by the same authority that issued the decision. | Opportunity for immediate reconsideration of the administrative act. |
| Higher Instance | Review by the immediately superior authority (e.g., Board of Directors). | Final and definitive decision within the administrative sphere. |
Effects of the Appeal: The Impact on the Operation
The way an appeal influences the execution of a decision depends on the effect attributed to it. This choice is strategic for the maintenance of mine activities:
- Devolutive Effect (General Rule): The matter is returned for reexamination, but the original decision continues to produce effects while the appeal is judged.
- Suspensive Effect (Exceptional): Must be expressly requested and motivated. When the just fear of irreparable or difficult to repair damage is demonstrated, the appeal can suspend the effectiveness of the decision (such as the annulment of a fine or the interruption of a forfeiture process) until the final verdict.
Appeal vs. Review
The Appeal and the Review have distinct roles in the defense of the miner. While the appeal is the direct combat in the heat of the legal deadline, the review has a corrective and often subsequent character.
| Attribute | Administrative Appeal | Revision of Administrative Acts |
| Deadline | 10 business days (Strict). | At any time (subject to the statute of limitations). |
| Focus | Disagreement on merit or interpretation. | Flagrant illegality or serious new facts. |
| Legal Basis | Principle of the Adversarial System. | Administration’s Power of Self-Correction (Self-Tutelage). |
The effectiveness of an appeal does not lie solely in the contestation, but in the ability to prove the technical error through an integrated technical and legal foundation. The regularity and legal certainty of a mining title often depend on the agility and precision with which this “shield” is used.
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