GROUPS FILE CLAIM AGAINST BP AND PIPELINE
PARTNERS IN 5 COUNTRIES: "GREEN" COMPANY
VIOLATING INTERNATIONAL NORMS IN
CONTROVERSIAL CASPIAN OIL PIPELINE
April 29, 2003, Paris, France -- As
political and business leaders gather in
Paris for the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development's (OECD) Forum
2003, environmental organizations [1] today
submitted complaints to the British, French,
German, Italian, and U.S. governments. They
charge that oil giant British Petroleum (BP)
and its consortium partners [2] in the
proposed Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline are
breaching the OECD's "Guidelines for
Multinational Enterprises."
The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline
is a proposed pipeline that would span 1,056
miles (1,760 kilometers) from the Azerbaijan
capital of Baku, through T'bilisi Georgia,
ending in the Mediterranean city of Ceyhan,
Turkey. A gas pipeline also is planned to
follow the same route.
BP is the lead sponsor; there are nine
other participants in the consortium. The BTC
consortium is seeking the political and
financial support of their countries' export
credit agencies, the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Develoment and the
International Finance Corporation of the
World Bank Group.
The OECD Guidelines oblige companies to
"contribute to sustainable development and to
refrain from seeking or accepting exemptions
from environmental, health, safety, labour,
taxation and other legislation". The NGOs
charge that the Consortium has negotiated
agreements that openly flout this
obligation.
The Guidelines, which were revised in June
2000, cannot be legally enforced. But they
are increasingly regarded as a key yardstick
of corporate social responsibility.
In their 9-page Complaint, the NGOs charge
the Consortium with having:
-
exerted undue influence on the
regulatory framework for the project - the
Consortium's legal team even boasting that
it had "created laws" in Azerbaijan;
-
-
sought or accepted exemptions related
to social, labor, tax and environmental
laws;
-
-
pressured the Georgian environment
minister to approve the Environmental
Impact Assessment (EIA) despite the
minister's protests that the EIA violates
Georgian law; and
-
-
undermined the host governments'
ability to mitigate serious threats to the
environment, human health and safety by,
among other actions, negotiating agreements
that free the pipeline project from any
environmental, public health or other laws
that the three host countries might adopt
in the future.
Other concerns highlighted in the
complaint include failure to adequately
consult with project-affected communities and
failure to operate in a manner contributing
to goals of sustainable development.
"It is tremendously ironic that
TotalFinaElf, an official sponsor of the
OECD Forum, is breaching the very standards
of behavior prescribed by the OECD
governments,"
said Hélène Ballande of Friends of the Earth
France.
"BP markets itself as a clean and green
oil company,"
said Nicholas Hildyard from The Corner House.
"
This complaint reveals how BP and its
partners are routinely seeking exemptions
from public health and environmental laws,
and circumventing genuine public
consultation. This isn't beyond petroleum,
it's beyond the pale."
"While violating agreed international
norms, the BTC consortium has the gall to
expect taxpayers to support this project
through public financing from the World
Bank and export credit agencies,"
said Heike Drillisch of WEED in Germany.
"US officials have told us we should be
grateful for which companies are involved
in this pipeline,"
said Jon Sohn of Friends of the Earth US."
Yet as consortium partners in this
pipeline, US companies like Unocal and
ConocoPhillips are violating agreements
that our government has endorsed and
professes to uphold."
Given that the consortium is currently
seeking public funding for the oil pipeline,
the groups are calling on governments to give
immediate attention to the complaints. The
groups are also calling for an immediate
moratorium of construction activities and for
financial support to be placed on hold until
the consortium has remedied the breaches to
the OECD Guidelines.
The OECD Guidelines for Multinational
Enterprises prescribe "standards of behavior"
for companies operating in both OECD and
non-OECD member countries. OECD governments
are obliged to create a "National Contact
Point" that will promote the use of the
guidelines among corporations, monitor their
implementation and hear complaints of
specific instances where it is alleged a
company has violated the Guidelines.
The U.S. version of the complaint and
appendices can be found at:
www.foe.org/
NOTES TO EDITORS:
[1] The environmental organizations are:
Campagna per la Riforma della Banca Mondiale
¨ Cornerhouse ¨ FERN ¨ Friends of the Earth
England Wales & Northern Ireland ¨
Friends of the Earth France ¨ Friends of the
Earth Netherlands ¨ Friends of the Earth US ¨
Platform ¨ the Kurdish Human Rights Project ¨
Urgewald ¨ WEED ¨ Germanwatch ¨BUND
[2] The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Consortium
(BTC Co) is comprised of BP, which has
controlling interest, as well as 10 companies
from 8 other nations: SOCAR (Azerbaijan),
Unocal, ConocoPhillips, (US) Statoil
(Norway), TPAO (Turkey), ENI (Italy),
TotalFinaElf (France), Itochu, Inpex (Japan),
and Delta Hess (joint US-Saudi).
FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:
IN PARIS, FRANCE :
Helene Ballande, Les Amis de la Terre :
+33.6.77 10 71 25
Heike Drillisch, WEED, +49.177.345 26 11
Jon Sohn, Friends of the Earth US, +33.6.68
98 83 41
Willemijn Nagel, Friends of the Earth
Netherlands, +31.6.44 65 00 43
Emilie Thenard, FERN, +32.474.52 72 65
IN THE US:
Carol Welch, +1.202. 783 7400 ext. 237
IN ITALY:
Antonio Tricarico, CRBM, +39.328.84 85
448
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