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Slow progress on World Bank’s oil, gas and mining commitments

The World Bank has made slow progress in implementing the commitments made in its management response to the Extractive Industries Review (EIR) in September 2004 (see Update 42). Management had proposed reforms on: the explicit tracking of poverty reduction associated with extractive industry projects; the consideration of governance indicators for host countries; broader inclusion of local stakeholders; the development of a more systematic approach to revenue transparency; and increased lending for renewable energy projects. In a letter to Rashad Kaldany, director of the Bank’s oil, gas, mining and chemicals department, 73 NGOs raised a number of serious concerns:

Civil unrest and state violence as BTC pipeline opened

The need for a fundamental reform of Bank support for extractive industry projects is illustrated in the case of the IFC-funded Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline, officially inaugurated 25 May in Baku, Azerbaijan. Days before, riot police in Baku intervened to prevent would-be protestors from reaching the inauguration venue. A rally had been planned to demand amendments to Azerbaijan’s election laws to prevent the authorities falsifying this year’s election outcome. The controversial project has been strongly opposed on social and environmental grounds, amidst fears that it will exacerbate conflict and human rights abuses in Kurdish areas of eastern Turkey, which have already seen the arrest and torture of human rights defenders.

Two recent reports, based on fact-finding missions to Azerbaijan and Georgia in October 2004, by a consortium of NGOs, released days before the pipeline’s inauguration illustrate a lack of due diligence demonstrated by the IFC. They reveal a catalogue of unresolved problems with the project such as: non-compliance with Georgian state environmental permit conditions; failure to adequately address environmental risks and compensation; drinking water pollution; uncompensated expropriated land, and damage to property. A resident from Tsemi village in the Borjomi region in Georgia said “BTC brought benefits for the government but local people have nothing. They have destroyed our road, the tourist season has been totally lost…The only opportunity we had to earn a living was taken”.

The Georgian report contains leaked documents detailing disputes between the Georgian government, BP and international financial institutions regarding safety concerns.