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IFC criticised for bad smell of Ukraine loan

Article summary

An IFC loan to Danish pig farming company in Ukraine has resulted in a complaint to the Compliance Advisor Ombudsdman because of the air pollution and harm to local people’s health.

A $70 million loan that the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the Bank’s private sector arm, provided in March 2013 to the Danish company Axzon to expand its industrial pig farming in western Ukraine, has come under increased pressure from local communities and civil society groups. In February, affected communities in the Ivano-Frankivsk region lodged a complaint with the Compliance Advisor Ombudsman (CAO), the IFC’s accountability mechanism, criticising the company for producing air pollution and odour harmful to the health and well-being of local citizens thereby infringing their human rights. The complaint also raises concerns about potential ground and water pollution, the breach of national laws in constructing farms dangerously close to villages and severe limitations in access to information on the company’s environmental impact and public participation in decision making. The CAO found the complaint eligible and has begun an assessment.