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- Info
0603
campagna per la riforma della banca
mondiale, cee bankwatch network, friends of
the earth international, greenpeace
international, international rivers network,
sustainable energy & economy network,
urgewald, wwf international
bonn, june 3, 2004
world bank spins renewable energy
conference, ignores extractive industries
review, continues oily business as usual
Environmentalists and development advocates
today decried the World Bank's announcement
of support for renewable energy as mere spin.
Stating that the proposed increase is
marginal at best and does nothing to address
the Bank's ongoing bias towards fossil fuels,
the groups called on the Bank to adopt the
recommendations of its own studies and phase
out support for coal and oil while
dramatically increasing its support for
renewable energy.
“Marginally increasing the funding for
renewables is not enough because the World
Bank's own numbers show that lending for
polluting fuels is growing even faster.” said
Stephan Singer of WWF International.
The targets were announced as the first
public Bank response to its Extractive
Industries Review (EIR), which was initiated
in 2000 by Bank President James Wolfensohn.
The EIR was formed to evaluate whether or not
Bank support for Big Oil and King Coal
contributes to the Bank's mission of poverty
alleviation. The answer, after two years
of
consultation and study, was that they do
not. The EIR recommended phase-outs of Bank
support for coal and oil, and a phase-in of
renewables by increasing lending by 20% of
the total energy lending portfolio each
year.
“They're not even close to the EIR
recommendation. They're pledging 20% of a
cent when they were asked to give 20% of a
dollar” said Steve Kretzmann of the Institute
for Policy Studies (IPS). According to IPS'
analysis of the Bank's lending, over the past
decade (1994 to 2003), the World Bank Group
approved over $24.8 billion in financing for
fossil fuel extractive and power projects. At
the same time, the World Bank Group approved
just $1.06 billion in renewable energy
projects. They preferred fossil fuels over
renewables by a 23:1 ratio.[1]
The new targets announced by the World Bank
today are far short of the EIR
recommendations, and would only increase the
very small renewables and efficiency
portfolio by 20% of itself annually – or
about 1% of the total energy portfolio, which
is less than projected global growth in
demand for energy. “At this rate, it will
take the Bank Group nearly twenty years
before their renewables portfolio reaches
current levels of funding for fossil fuels –
it's absurd” said Janneke Bruil of Friends of
the Earth International.
“While we welcome the World Bank at least
setting a target here in Bonn, the money is
not enough and to be credible the Bank must
phase out support for fossil fuels by 2008”
said Daniel Mittler of Greenpeace
International.
“The $200 million that the Bank is pledging
for renewables is roughly the cost of their
contribution to just one of the many fossil
fuel projects they support annually” said
Petr Hlobil of CEE Bankwatch.
Disturbingly, Bank Group figures for
renewables include support for large dams,
which are widely criticized for their high
costs and social and environmental impacts.
“The World Bank Group includes in its
renewables portfolio some of its most
controversial large hydropower projects. If
it continues to perversely define large
hydropower as
renewable, this could consume the bulk of
the Bank's pledged increase in renewables
support” said Patrick McCully, of the
International Rivers Network
Contacts in Bonn:
Stephan Singer, WWF International,
32-496-550 709 (English, German)
Daniel Mittler, Greenpeace International,
49-171-876 53 45 (German, English)
Steve Kretzmann, Institute for Policy
Studies, 1-202-497-1033 (English)
Regine Richter, Urgewald, 49-170-29 30 725
(German, English)
Petr Hlobil, CEE Bankwatch, 420-603-154 349
(Czech, English, Russian)
Janneke Bruil, Friends of the Earth
International, 44-795-287 69 29
(Dutch, German, English, Spanish)
Antonio Tricarico, CRBM, 39-328-84 85 448
(Italian, English)
Patrick McCully, International Rivers
Network, 1-510-213-1441 (English,
Spanish)
Sebastien Godinot, Les Amis de la Terre,
33-6-68 98 83 41 (French, English)
[1] Analysis by Institute for Policy
Studies,
www.seen.org
Note that the World Bank Group's figures
seem higher for renewables support because of
their inclusion of large hydropower projects,
efficiency (both supply and demand side) and
a 14, rather than 10 year timeframe.
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