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- Info
0326
brussels, march 26, 2002
a sound investment?
eib funding for enron
”Our Mission is to further the objectives
of the European Union by making long-term
finance available for sound investment.” –
Mission of the European Investment Bank”
“To receive our support, projects and
programmes must be viable in four fundamental
areas: economic, technical, environmental and
financial. We appraise each investment
project thoroughly and follow it through to
completion”
http://www.eib.org/about/mission.htm
The recent report, “Enron's Pawns: How
Public Institutions Bankrolled Enron's
Globalization Game” from the Institute for
Policy Studies (IPS) has revealed that Enron,
the disgraced American company which recently
declared bankruptcy amidst allegations of
criminal wrongdoing, received USD 7,2 billion
in public assistance for its global
operations. A portion of that public
assistance came from the financial arm of the
European Union – the European Investment Bank
(EIB).
“The IPS report proves what we have been
pointing out for the last couple of years,”
says Magda Stoczkiewicz, coordinator of the
EIB: NO REFORM – NO MONEY! campaign. “The EIB
is neither efficient nor does it truly fulfil
EU objectives. It operates behind closed
doors, without proper supervision, clear
sectoral strategies or strict environmental
standards.”
According to the IPS report, the EIB
supported ENRON with the following loans:
$493 million towards Enron's investment in an
Italian power plant and $60 million toward
the Bolivia to Porto Alegre, Brazil gas
pipeline. The Bank also provided indirect
support for Enron when it approved a $78
million package for a 1000 MW power project
in Santa Rita, Philippines. Enron was not a
developer of that project, but it did hold
the plant's fuel supply contract. The EIB is
also considering a $35 million contribution
toward an electricity transmission system in
Macedonia in which Enron has an interest.
The fact that the EIB would have no problems
with supporting ENRON clearly calls for a
closer look at this institution and the
manner in which it fulfills its goals. On
February 7 of this year, more than 30 NGOs
from all over Europe launched a campaign
entitled, EIB: NO REFORM – NO MONEY! They are
linking the EIB's request for a capital
increase from the 15 EU member states with
the implementation of necessary reforms in
the areas of: public access to information;
environmental standards; development mandate;
supervision by EU institutions.
“I wonder which of the EU objectives the EIB
thought they were fulfilling when they
decided to support ENRON” says Stoczkiewicz,
who adds, “and that's without mentioning the
“sound investments” which they are so proud
of!”
For more information contact:
Magda Stoczkiewicz, CEE Bankwatch Network,
Friends of the Earth International,
magdas@foeeurope.org
, (March 27-29
th
, tel: +48 12 430 03 20)
The campaign EIB: NO REFORM – NO MONEY! is
coordinated by the CEE Bankwatch Network and
Friends of the Earth International. Campaign
materials can be found at
www.foei.org/ifi/eib.html
The IPS report can be found at
www.seen.org
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