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-----Original Message-----
From: jsohn [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, August 14, 2001 11:43 PM
To: can-talk
Subject: [can-talk] urgent: Please Endorse IFI (MDB/ECA) Fossil Fuel/Mining
Phase-Out


apologies for cross posting and please forward to your networks.
Below is a call to organizations to endorse a global call on the World BAnk
to stop financing fossil fuel and mining projects and to enhance local
community self-determination.  Endorsements are being collected at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

the endorsements will be presented to the WB at their annual meetings.

Towards a Phase-Out of International Financial Institution Support
of Fossil Fuel and Mining Projects


To: all organizations and movements concerned with fossil fuel and mining
projects:


Amsterdam, July 2001

Friends and colleagues,

Friends of the Earth International is seeking your support for a campaign
that aims to phase out International Financial Institution financing for
fossil fuel and mining projects.

In the past several years, public financial institutions such as the
Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) and Export Credit Agencies (ECAs) have
come under increasing fire for their large volume of lending in the fossil
fuel and mining sectors. As concerns about climate change escalate, and as
the development impacts of extractive industries become increasingly
dubious, citizens around the world are questioning the role that publicly
financed institutions have in perpetuating extraction-based economies and
fossil fuel dependence rather than clean energy.

Acknowledging this concern, the World Bank agreed to undertake a process of
examining its role in the fossil fuel and mining sectors. In response,
Friends of the Earth International has produced a position paper calling for
an immediate moratorium and eventual total phase-out of International
Financial Institution (IFI) investments in these sectors. This call is
directed at the World Bank, as well as the rest of the MDBs and ECAs. The
Oilwatch Network has similarly called for a moratorium on investments in
these sectors.

Friends of the Earth International believes it is imperative that the World
Bank Group, and other IFIs, receive a strong signal from civil society
around the world as the World Bank undertakes its review. As development
institutions, MDBs should be pursuing investments that genuinely lead to
improvements in people's lives and in their environments. A shift away from
fossil fuel and mining investments and towards socially and environmentally
sustainable energy solutions is one important way of doing that.

Friends of the Earth International seeks to build a broad coalition of
citizens' groups and movements to work in solidarity to achieve such a
moratorium and subsequent phase-out. If you or your organization would like
to join as partners in this campaign we urge you to get in touch with us.

Please find below our call for a moratorium. To endorse this call, please
contact the International Financial Institutions program of Friends of the
Earth International at [EMAIL PROTECTED] The full Friends of the Earth
International position paper is available at www.foei.org.

Appeal:
Towards a Phase-Out of International Financial Institution Support
of Fossil Fuel and Mining Projects


We, the undersigned organizations, are calling for an immediate moratorium
on, and subsequent phase-out of all financing for fossil fuel and mining
projects by International Financial Institutions, including Multilateral
Development Banks and Export Credit Agencies.

It is estimated that from 1995-1999, IFIs allocated around US$55 billion to
projects in these sectors (not including fossil fuel thermal generating
plants). This financing catalyzed even more private sector financing.
Problems associated with fossil fuel and mining development include:

Environmental destruction
Fossil fuel and mining projects threaten biodiversity and destroy pristine
lands. Toxic spills, oil flares, and mining waste destroy local ecosystems
and harm human health. On a global level, fossil fuel projects contribute to
catastrophic climate change, and worsen already increasing temperatures,
rising sea levels, and volatile weather patterns.

Human rights violations
Fossil fuel and mining extraction is too often associated with repression,
violations of human rights, and suppression of the rights of indigenous
peoples. Projects have forcibly displaced indigenous peoples and destroyed
their way of life. Authoritarian regimes use repression as a way to protect
projects and their investors. These conflicts over resources, access to
land, and compensation can fuel already volatile social situations and lead
to armed conflict.

Dubious development impacts
There is no body of statistical evidence demonstrating that fossil fuel and
mining investments substantially enhance GDP for most 'developing'
countries, or that these projects automatically deliver measurable benefits
to the communities that need it most. In fact, some research shows that
extraction-based economies have lower development indices than natural
resource-poor countries, partly the result of corruption and rent-seeking.

For these reasons, we call on publicly financed International Financial
Institutions to phase out of financing fossil fuel and mining investments.
Instead they should use their scarce resources for projects that tackle the
dual challenge of combating poverty and stopping catastrophic climate
change.

This phase-out should cover all phases of the fossil-fuel and mining cycles:
prospecting, exploration, test drilling, exploitation, as well as
construction of related infrastructure such as pipelines and roads, and any
financial and regulatory advice or programs by IFIs that favor such
projects. While there could be some exceptions to the phase-out, these
should only be determined through genuine local participatory processes, and
local communities should retain the right to veto projects. This phase-out
should be complemented by a phase-in of energy investments that meet the
energy needs of the poor, and are based on renewable energy and energy
efficiency projects that should be the standard for meeting future energy
demands.
CALL TO ACTION

For the reasons set out above, the undersigned organizations call on
International Financial Institutions (MDBs and ECAs) to agree on a
moratorium for new investments in fossil fuel and mining projects. This
moratorium would allow for:

The establishment of a strict ban on financing by any IFI for any new fossil
fuel and minerals exploration projects in areas of high conservation value,
territories of indigenous peoples' and nations, areas where local
communities oppose such projects, and areas where investments will
exacerbate armed conflict. IFIs should immediately consult and work openly
with civil society and governments to establish these critical no-go zones.

A detailed reevaluation of all pending projects which have an impact on the
areas mentioned above, with the objective to find better alternatives for
these projects or to cancel the project when no such alternatives exist

Development of concrete action plans for a complete phase-out of financing
for these types of projects within five years. These plans should
systematically identify policies and projects that help phase-in a positive
targeted energy lending shift, to enable IFIs to target the dual goal of
eradicating poverty and preventing catastrophic climate change.

IFIs must assume responsibility for any damage caused by their projects to
ecosystems and to the economic and social situations of communities. It is
therefore necessary to carry out a study of the impacts that energy policies
and projects of IFIs have had on developing countries and the plight of
specific communities. IFIs must provide resources for the compensation of
damage and the physical restoration of affected areas.

IFIs must acknowledge the need to limit investments in other sectors and
projects that are based on technologies with high use of fossil fuels and
oil byproducts.

IFIs should respect the sovereign rights of communities to choose their own
development path, based on their own priorities and preferences. Therefore,
IFIs must establish participatory systems through which communities to be
affected by IFI financed projects can freely establish their decisions on
the project, with the capacity to modify or veto such projects.

Export Credit Agencies have been documented to finance the environmental and
social destruction of local communities and to exacerbate long-term global
climate change. ECAs must begin meaningful transformation towards binding
environmental standards and portfolio shifts away from fossil fuels and
towards renewable energy within two years, or they should be abolished.


Signed by (organizations only):

Friends of the Earth International



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