International Financial Institutions Program
For more information about CIEL's International Financial Institutions Program, contact Jocelyn Medallo.
Environmentalists Express Concern over Chad-Cameroon Pipeline
February 22, 2001
The World Bank Group's
announcement that it has appointed a special committee to oversee the
controversial Chad-Cameroon oil pipeline project was met today with a
lukewarm response from international environment and human rights groups,
who expressed concern over potentially harmful loopholes and omissions
in the committee's charter.
The Bank-appointed International Advisory Group (IAG) was appointed to
act as a watchdog for the pipeline, a massive oil development project
in western Africa. Approved by the Bank in June 2000, over the strong
opposition of local and international environmental and human rights groups,
the project will provide more than $190 million in financing to the governments
of Chad and Cameroon and to an oil consortium led by ExxonMobil and Chevron.
The locally affected populations and international environmental and human
rights groups had asked for a moratorium on the construction of the pipeline,
stating that the project would not only harm fragile rainforests in Cameroon,
but may worsen an already violent human rights situation in Chad. Some
of these concerns materialized last November when the Chadian government
used more than $4 million from the deal to purchase arms. The World Bank
agreed to set up the International Advisory Group in an effort to address
some of the concerns of civil society.
Pipeline critics said the appointment of the IAG represents a first step
toward greater transparency in how the project develops, but cautioned
that the group's charter, or Terms of Reference, calls its ultimate effectiveness
into question. Their chief concerns include:
· the Terms of Reference appointing the IAG do not include the monitoring
of human rights under the mandate of the IAG;
· the relationship between the IAG and the oil companies is unclear, making
access to critical information from the oil companies
uncertain;
· the IAG has no permanent posting in the pipeline region, and will be
limited by monitoring from afar. On-site visits are
scheduled only twice per year.
“To us, it is unclear what this IAG will actually be monitoring, and there
is no mention at all how the members of the group will actually communicate
with the local people affected by this project,” said Samuel Nguiffo of
the Centre for Environment and Development in Cameroon.
"This project has been plagued from the start with transparency, environmental,
and corruption problems, and is desperately in need of an oversight committee
that will aggressively promote community interests and needs. It’s not
yet clear that the IAG will play this role," said Emilie Thenard, associate
for Center for International Environmental Law’s Human Rights and Environment
Program.
###
Learn More!
To receive CIEL's monthy newletter, click here.
Latest International Financial Institutions Program News
- Civil Society and Entrepreneurs Call on World Bank to Clean Up Energy Lending
- New CIEL blog post asks #Whatwillittake for the World Bank to uphold human rights?
- The World Bank's private sector financing arm doesn't know the environmental and social impacts of nearly half its portfolio
- Civil society fears World Bank poised to weaken its social and environmental policies and procedures

---- Enter A Caption for Image ---
!!!!!
CIEL (UNITED STATES) | 1350 CONNECTICUT AVENUE, NW SUITE #1100 | WASHINGTON, DC 20036| PHONE: (202) 785-8700 FAX: (202) 785-8701 | E-MAIL: INFO@CIEL.ORG
CIEL (SWITZERLAND) | 15 RUE DES SAVOISES, 1205 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND | PHONE:41-22-789-0500 FAX: 41-22-789-0739 | E-MAIL: GENEVA@CIEL.ORG

