|
|
|
|

NGOs meet the EBRD President |

Tomasz Terlecki of CEE Bankwatch chaired the meeting |
"Meeting together is a very good tradition. You bring the voice of the people
in the region and it is important that their voice is heard,” said Mr Lemierre
welcoming NGOs representatives to EBRD headquarters in London for their fourth
annual meeting with him.
Representatives of 42 NGOs from the EBRD’s region of operation and shareholder
countries shared with Mr Lemierre their views on the Bank’s policies on
energy, environment, and public information, the Sakhalin Island energy
development, the Bank’s strategy for Russia, and investment issues in Georgia,
Ukraine and Uzbekistan.
Energy policy – safety matters
The Bank’s energy policy consultations with civil society have moved in the
right direction according to Tomasz Terlecki of CEE Bankwatch. “However, we
are concerned that the energy policy is moving towards investing in nuclear
power projects.” Mr Lemierre clarified that the Bank’s new energy policy
limits investments to safety aspects of nuclear plants.
Promoting greater energy efficiency in its 27 countries of operation is one of
the Bank’s top priorities and part of the goals of the new energy policy.
“I am very pleased that policy makers have strongly endorsed the energy
efficiency and climate change agenda,” he added.
Under its new Sustainable Energy Initiative, the EBRD proposes almost doubling
its ‘green energy’ investments by 2009 to €1.5 billion to improve the region’s
energy security. EBRD countries of operations are among the world’s highest
emitters of greenhouse gases, after the US and China. If these countries could
reach western European levels of energy efficiency, world energy consumption
could fall 7.2 per cent.
Sakhalin energy project
While the support of sustainable energy was welcomed, the NGOs were vocal in
calling for the EBRD to refuse financing for Sakhalin II.
The EBRD’s process of assessing whether to invest in an oil and gas extraction
project offshore of Russia’s Sakhalin island, and a related onshore pipeline,
has not been an easy one. The Bank, like NGOs, is concerned about this
project’s environmental impact.
An NGO representative said that Shell, the company developing the energy
project, “has breached environmental standards on river crossings during
construction of pipelines across rivers known to be sensitive areas for
spawning salmon.”
A representative from the WWF noted that “for the EBRD to continue to test
Shell, it would be the same as to test a loser.” NGOs voiced the concerns that
this energy project is causing pollution, erosion and oil spills that threaten
the fishery.
Mr Lemierre repeated that the EBRD’s decision would be based entirely on
whether the project meets the Bank’s standards. “We maintain dialogue with
Shell about the environmental aspects of this project and dialogue with you to
add greater public scrutiny. My duty is to respect the Bank’s standards and
make decisions in an independent way.”
He added: “You have done a tremendous amount of scientific work and I
congratulate you. We have done well together and have kept a high level of
public scrutiny on this project, one of the highest that any project has had
in that region.”
But, he added, the decision whether to recommend the project to the Board of
Directors would be based on the quality of the project and not as a reaction
to pressure by either the opponents or the sponsors.
Environment Policy and Public Information Policy
Moving to questions of policy reviews, a participant’s suggestion to add
implementation guidelines to the Bank’s environment policy was important, in
Mr Lemierre’s view, as “implementation guidelines give flesh to the policy”.
The gender issue, according to Fidanka Bacheva of CEE Bankwatch, needs to be
given particular importance in the Bank’s environment policy, and Mr Lemierre
noted that with support from UK and Canada, the Bank is making a study to see
what happened to gender issues in projects it financed.
An NGO representative suggested the Bank improves presumption of information
disclosure in its public information policy and makes decisions of its board
public.
“Some countries are comfortable disclosing their decisions, some others are
not,” said Mr Lemierre, noting that disclosure must not impede the Bank’s
ability to work with the confidentiality requirements of the private sector,
because that is how we do business and create jobs.
A snapshot of Georgia, Ukraine, Russia and Uzbekistan
“Let’s do business with Georgia,” the Georgian Prime Minister, Zurab
Noghaideli, has said in his presentation during EBRD’s Annual Meeting.
But an NGO representative told Mr Lemierre that the Bank must encourage
independent assessment of privatisation and public procurement in Georgia,
adding there is little information disclosed to investors in Georgia and this
damages the investment climate.
“Georgia deserves attention and support,” said Mr Lemierre. “There is
potential for foreign investment in Georgia but we should remember that
transparency, rule of law, and the fight against corruption must be the rules
of the game.”
In response to questions on the strategy for Ukraine, Mr Lemierre saw Ukraine
as a good example of a country moving forward. “We doubled our commitments to
Ukraine in one year,” he said.
Representatives of Russian NGOs suggested the Bank review its strategy with
Russia and shift support to the private sector rather than the public sector.
Indeed, this is already happening.
The picture has not changed much in Uzbekistan with NGOs concerned about human
rights violations. “Not a single independent trade union exists in Uzbekistan.
NGOs are not allowed to register,” said a representative of an Uzbek NGO.
“Could you just say to the Uzbek government: we will do business with you if
you leave NGOs alone? We need to develop civil society in Uzbekistan,” pleaded
another.
In Uzbekistan, the EBRD is currently restricting its investments to private
sector activities.
Said Mr Lemierre: “We are sticking to our commitments, we say what we think
and we take a pro-active approach in order to help people such as those in
Uzbekistan. The mission we have is to create jobs for people while working
with private sector. I have a lot of respect for all of you who maintain a
clear voice on these issues,” said Mr Lemierre to NGO representatives,
inviting them to the next year’s EBRD’s Annual Meeting in Kazan.
Written by EBRD Communications Adviser Marjola Xhunga.
26 May 2006
|