Banks opt out of funding EACOP

Banks opt out of funding EACOP

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The $3.5b East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project could run into trouble after some international commercial banks withdrew from funding the construction of the world’s longest heated crude oil pipeline proposed by French Oil Company Total and the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC).

“The banks provided statements making it clear they will not support the East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline [EACOP]after an open letter endorsed by 263 organisations from around the world was sent to 25 banks considered most likely to be approached for financing,” a March 18 press release from Inclusive Development International, read in part.

“Barclays does not intend to participate in the financing of the East African Crude Oil Pipeline project,” it further read.

Credit Suisse is also said to share the same position with Barclays.

On this, an alliance of African and international environmental and human rights organisations have claimed another win in their campaign to stop the construction of the oil pipeline.

Bank Track, which is among these organisations, raised the red flag over alleged ignored social and environmental concerns along with the project.

“The EACOP is manifestly incompatible with global efforts to reduce our carbon emissions. Banks simply can’t have it both ways – you can’t claim to be serious about climate change and support climate-destroying projects like the EACOP,” Mr Ryan Brightwell, the Researcher and Editor at BankTrack, said.

When Daily Monitor asked Mr Brightwell about the authenticity of the quoted bank statements in their release, responded in an email, “the banks provided the statements to us, with permission for us to publish them on the stopeacop.net website: Who's Banking on the East African Crude Oil Pipeline? — #StopEACOP. If you wish to confirm these statements with the banks themselves or seek further comment from them, may I suggest you contact their press offices.”

Daily Monitor sought confirmation from Credit Suisse through the Media Relations, Credit Suisse Group in Zurich, Switzerland, both on email and phone calls. “Thanks for reaching out. I can confirm: Credit Suisse is not considering participating in the EACOP project. Kind regards,” Mr Yannick Orto, the Credit Suisse Services Ag Group External Communications in Zürich, responded.

Mr Orto said as a bank policy, they will not give the reason why they are not supporting the EACOP and advised everyone to only use their “public statement” .

Daily Monitor could not reach Barclays Bank through its corporate and investment contacts as provided on the bank’s website for press and media. Our calls could not be answered by the bank and the voice mail message left was not returned.

However, the bank is quoted on the #STOPEACOP campaign: “Barclays does not intend to participate in the financing of the East African Crude Oil Pipeline project” as its public statement.

“Besides climate and environmental risks, our field investigations reveal serious human rights violations already caused by EACOP, with tens of thousands of people deprived of their livelihoods before having received any compensation. We call on French banks to commit themselves quickly and publicly not to finance this project,” Juliette Renaud, the senior campaigner at Friends of the Earth France, said.

It is, however, not clear whether the banks’ refusal to finance the project is related to the environment. Mr Samuel Okulony, the chief executive officer of the Uganda-based Environment Governance Institute, said the next 10 years will be critical for efforts to mitigate the severity of climate change and that the pipeline will generate an additional 34 million tonnes of carbon emissions each year, which is disastrous.

Mr David Pred, the executive director of Inclusive Development International, said it would be a significant blow to the project if Standard Bank was to walk away, given the key role it has played as a financial advisor in arranging the $2.5 billion project loan that is required to finance construction.

“Any credible assessment would find that this project is too risky for the millions of people whose water resources it would jeopardise and for our rapidly warming climate, which simply cannot afford another massive oil project,” Mr Pred said.

Affected persons

The environmental and rights activists say the project stretching nearly 1,445 kms threatens to displace families and farmers and would pose risk to water resources and wetlands – including the Lake Victoria basin, which more than 40 million people rely on.

According to a report released by Oxfam International in September 2020 titled ‘‘empty promises down the line’’ a human rights impact assessment on the EACOP, approximately 200 households will be relocated.

The report adds that an estimated 3,200 to 3,500 households will be economically displaced, meaning they will lose land whereas in Tanzania, 391 households will lose land as part of the priority areas and 9,122 will lose land for the pipeline right of way.

Oil companies, government respond

Both the oil companies and government have been slow to comment.

Ms Linda Nabirye, the external communications coordinator for Total E&P Uganda, referred us to their March 8 press release that responds to some issues raised by the banks and the NGOs.

The release titled: “Uganda and Tanzania: Total acts in transparency on social and environmental stakes of the Lake Albert resources development project,” said the projects Tilenga in Uganda and the EACOP in Uganda and Tanzania “are undertaken in a sensitive environmental context and require the implementation of land acquisition programmes with a specific attention to respecting the rights of the communities concerned.”

Total says environmental and social impact assessment (ESIA) studies have been conducted and approved by the Ugandan and Tanzanian authorities for both projects, which are carried out in compliance with the stringent performance standards of the International Finance Corporation (IFC).

Total also said it would work closely with Uganda Wildlife Authority and with IUCN experts to integrate the best practices for the protection of chimpanzees, particularly by promoting the conservation of forest habitats.

Ms Amina Bukenya, the spokesperson for CNOOC, asked us to send questions on her email which she had not responded to by press time.

On the government side, Ms Stella Amony, the communications lead for EACOP, replied: “The matter is sensitive and needs a collective response from the joint venture members.”

Ms Angella Karisa Ambaho, the communications Officer of Uganda National Oil Company (UNOC) said: “I am still waiting for approval of my response to your questions you raised on email, which I shared with my superiors”.

Established in 2013, UNOC is mandated to hold 15 per cent of Uganda’s petroleum licences on behalf of the government.

Local NGOs take on the issue

Africa Institute for Energy Governance (AFIEGO), a registered public policy research and advocacy organisation whose main objectives is to promote environmental conservation and community rights in the extractives sector, said the banks turning down requests to finance CNOOC and Total is a signal to other financiers to consider their .

“....Climate change, environmental and social risks of the project are immense and when banks see other financial institutions taking a step back and refusing to finance the project, they also re-assess their participation,” Ms Diana Nabiruma, the senior communications officer at AFIEGO, said.

Mr Brian Nahamya, a programmes associate at Global Rights Alert, an NGO involved in advocacy for the oil pipeline PAPs, said the land acquisition was done but no project affected person has received compensation since the end of the valuation process in 2018/2019.

‘‘...Every person affected by this project from Hoima to Rakai, no one has received compensation up to date,” he said.

Holes poked on EACOP Environmental remedies

Despite the National Environment Management Authority (Nema) issuing a certificate of approval to Total East Africa for an Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) as required by law on such a project in 2019, other international environmentalists have poked holes in it.

Section 3.3 of the Netherlands Commission for Environmental Assessment (NCEA) report on water and wetlands crossings and water use contends that “The ESIA does not make clear why open trench river crossings are chosen as the way to go. This is critical as major rivers typically come together with wide wetlands.”

The oil pipeline route

In Uganda, the oil pipeline will traverse through Hoima, Kikuube, Kakumiro, Mubende, Kyankwanzi, Gomba, Rakai, Lwengo, Kyotera, and Sembabule districts.

According to the East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline Environment and Impact Assessment Report 2019, the pipeline will originate from Kabaale, Hoima District and snake through different communities for a distance of 296km before it approaches the Uganda-Tanzanian border.

About the project

The East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) is a proposed 1,445km-pipeline that will transport oil from Hoima in Uganda to Tanga port in Tanzania.

About 1.7 billion barrels of recoverable oil have been discovered in the Albertine Graben, the basin of Lake Albert, on the border between Uganda and DR Congo. The extraction will take place at two oil fields: the Kingfisher field, operated by China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) and the Tilenga field, operated by Total S.A.

In September 2020 both Tanzania and Uganda agreed on the $3.5b oil pipeline project after years of discussing the relative merits of different routes out to the Indian Ocean.

Work was scheduled to start by the end of 2020 but the Covid-19 pandemic delayed the project. Tanzania says the project will create 10,000 jobs and that more than 90,000 people would be compensated to pave the way for the pipeline.

The oil will be partly refined in Uganda to supply the local market and partly exported to the international market via the EACOP. The project is being implemented by a joint venture of oil companies operating in the Albertine Graben including CNOOC and Total and Uganda government through the Uganda National Oil Company and Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation.
 
I'm not a hater and i want to see my people win. If they win then we, Africans, win too. I'd rather be a neighbor to a rich uganda than a poor one.

If the westerners don't want to finance it then get the chinese to fund it....better yet get africa development bank to finance it and put a refinery in there too.

Africa needs these types of projects. The westerners want to stop it but they don't provide alternatives
 
Hawa wazungu wajinga hawapendi kuona Africa tukisonga mbele. Hii ya kuleta pressure kwa banks eti zisifinance mradi huu ni wivu wa wazungu kuona kwamba Africa inataka kujikwamua kutoka kwenye lindi la umasikini. Mbona US wanajenga oil pipelines na hawapigwi vita? Mbona Russia wanajenga oil pipelines na hawapigwi vita? Mbona US na China ndio the world's biggest polluters na hawapigwi vita na NGO's? Hii pipeline itabadilisha Uchumi wa Africa Mashariki. Mambo ya kuwa masikini tumekataa. It is time for Africa to be wealthy too. Mambo ya kuomba omba wazungu pesa kwa bakuli tumekataa. Tunataka kujitafutia pesa zetu na kujipangia pesa zetu bila kutegemea mabeberu.
 
I'm not a hater and i want to see my people win. If they win then we, Africans, win too. I'd rather be a neighbor to a rich uganda than a poor one.

If the westerners don't want to finance it then get the chinese to fund it....better yet get africa development bank to finance it and put a refinery in there too.

Africa needs these types of projects. The westerners want to stop it but they don't provide alternatives
You are correct.
 
I'm not a hater and i want to see my people win. If they win then we, Africans, win too. I'd rather be a neighbor to a rich uganda than a poor one.

If the westerners don't want to finance it then get the chinese to fund it....better yet get africa development bank to finance it and put a refinery in there too.

Africa needs these types of projects. The westerners want to stop it but they don't provide alternatives

I like your levelheadedness and rationality on this, what's your take on the concerns raised by the various antagonists.
 
I'm sceptical about the source of this news... the project is on go.

Changamkieni fursa wadau. Hata majirani mkiweza kujipenyeza fursa zipo tele. Mradi mkubwa huu na uwekezaji unagharimu pesa ndefu.

image_f7e523c1-0507-44a2-980a-914915e0e81a20210402_044424.jpg
 
Hawa wazungu wajinga hawapendi kuona Africa tukisonga mbele. Hii ya kuleta pressure kwa banks eti zisifinance mradi huu ni wivu wa wazungu kuona kwamba Africa inataka kujikwamua kutoka kwenye lindi la umasikini. Mbona US wanajenga oil pipelines na hawapigwi vita? Mbona Russia wanajenga oil pipelines na hawapigwi vita? Mbona US na China ndio the world's biggest polluters na hawapigwi vita na NGO's? Hii pipeline itabadilisha Uchumi wa Africa Mashariki. Mambo ya kuwa masikini tumekataa. It is time for Africa to be wealthy too. Mambo ya kuomba omba wazungu pesa kwa bakuli tumekataa. Tunataka kujitafutia pesa zetu na kujipangia pesa zetu bila kutegemea mabeberu.

Lakini wanaopinga ni asasi za kijamii ambazo idadi yao 263, zikiwemo baadhi za Uganda, Tanzania na Kenya japo nyingi za Uzunguni, haitakua haki kulaumu hayo mabenki, wao walikua wameridhia kutoa mikopo. Kimsingi ni kushughulkia na kujibu madai yao kitaalam.
 
I like your levelheadedness and rationality on this, what's your take on the concerns raised by the various antagonists.
The first thing that comes to mind is the double standards here

What the USA is doing to the native indians with the Dakota access and Keystone XL pipeline is the stuff that african leaders are sent to the Hague for not to mention the destruction of environment.

Also Germany and Russia are building the underwater Nordstream 2 gas pipeline destroying several important marine habitats and breeding grounds.

These western governments and financial institutions are letting both projects go on despite opposition by the environmental and human rights groups

So why is it that this african pipeline is where they draw the red line in the sand?!

Second thing is the tone of the conversation

These NGO groups and financial institutions are not talking about how to improve and fix the problems with the project because if done right it will positively change the lives of millions. Instead the only conversation they're having is about stopping it completely which is unrealistic and unreasonable

Third thing that comes to mind is the saying, "to make an omelette you have to break a few eggs"

This pipeline is CRITICAL to this region and it has to get done. It has the capacity to completely transform how things are done from the logistics to geopolitics to economic policies. Imagine if we put a big efficient refinery in Uganda?! that means that this region(EAC) will finally tame the wild fluctuations of fuel supply and prices. However, Just like every other projects some people and some aspects nature will be negatively impacted, a necessary evil

Therefore the natural course of the conversation should be about how to make sure that those negative impacts are kept to a minimum not this nonsense about killing the project.
 
Hii itakua pigo kwa Uganda... labda Mchina aingilie kuokoa jahazi..
 
Lakini wanaopinga ni asasi za kijamii ambazo idadi yao 263, zikiwemo baadhi za Uganda, Tanzania na Kenya japo nyingi za Uzunguni, haitakua haki kulaumu hayo mabenki, wao walikua wameridhia kutoa mikopo. Kimsingi ni kushughulkia na kujibu madai yao kitaalam.
hamna asasi ya Tanzania inapinga sema asasi za Kenya na sababu ni wivu! financing Banks will be Sumimoto Bank and Standard Bank of SA!
 
Mradi ni wa dola billioni 3 tu.. Gdp ya Tz+UG ni karibu $100b..Waafrika muwache kuhangaika na pesa za wakoloni..Ni Rais kenyatta aliye sema JPM ndiye aliyeonyesha dunia kwamba inchi zinaweza kufanya maendeleo bila mikopo au misaada
Kuna miradi unawaachia makampuni binafsi kuifanya hatuna experience kwenye oil extractive industry! Kama kujenga bomba tujenge la gesi la Dar to Tanga to Uganda! halafu kumbuka tunahitaji kujenga SGR Mtwara-Mbamba Bay!
 
I'm sceptical about the source of this news... the project is on go.

Changamkieni fursa wadau. Hata majirani mkiweza kujipenyeza fursa zipo tele. Mradi mkubwa huu na uwekezaji unagharimu pesa ndefu.

View attachment 1740851
Hizo NGO za Kenya ziache kujitekenya na kucheka wenyewe, mradi lazma uendelee. Hiyo michezo wanayocheza ishapitwa na wakati.
 
The $3.5b East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project could run into trouble after some international commercial banks withdrew from funding the construction of the world’s longest heated crude oil pipeline proposed by French Oil Company Total and the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC).

Holes poked on EACOP Environmental remedies

Despite the National Environment Management Authority (Nema) issuing a certificate of approval to Total East Africa for an Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA) as required by law on such a project in 2019, other international environmentalists have poked holes in it.

About the project

The East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) is a proposed 1,445km-pipeline that will transport oil from Hoima in Uganda to Tanga port in Tanzania.

Wivu ni kitu kibaya sana, umesahau kuwa Total pamoja na the so-called Shabaab attacks in Mozambique bado wanaendelea na ujenzi wa LNG Trains kuwa ku- invest $20 b, hivi kweli unadhani watashindwa kupata $3.5 b za EACOP?
 
Hapa ni fitna na wivu tu ya GoK, wanaamini mradi uki delay labda maamuzi baadae yatabadilishwa tena uende Lamu, ni muhimu SSH aende Kampala next month kumalizana na Museveni na kuwapa assurance yote aliyoahidi JPM kuhusu huu mradi yatatekelezwa, akizubaa tu ndio zitaanza story nyingi.
 
Wivu ni kitu kibaya sana, umesahau kuwa Total pamoja na the so-called Shabaab attacks in Mozambique bado wanaendelea na ujenzi wa LNG Trains kuwa ku- invest $20 b, hivi kweli unadhani watashindwa kupata $3.5 b za EACOP?
Ila baba Total wamesimamisha ujenzi wa LNG Mozambique! Serikali ya Mozambique haichukulii serious swala la ISIS! rais wa Mozambique anatakiwa aombe msaada kutoka SADC ISIS wanajijenga! Ni hatari mpaka kwetu pia kwa jinsi serikali ya Mozambique inavyoendelea kuwa indecisive!


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Insurgency: tens of thousands of locals and refugees in the Palma area of Mozambique have fled to the coast and bush to escape the brutal insurgents. This photo was taken in August 2019 in a burned out area in the village of Aldeia da Paz outside Macomia in Cabo Delgado provincePhoto: AFP/SCANPIX

Palma attacks: Total stops work at Mozambique LNG as workers and locals flee brutal assault by Islamist insurgents​

Analyst said Mozambique government failed to act on intelligence of imminent attack

28 March 2021 16:23 GMT UPDATED 28 March 2021 16:55 GMT
By Iain Esau

in London
French supermajor Total has suspended work at its liquefied natural gas construction site in northern Mozambique and is evacuating workers amid reports that Islamist insurgents have taken control of the key nearby settlement of Palma, where villagers, refugees and workers were killed.

These apparently well-co-ordinated attacks began on 24 March, just hours after Total and the government agreed to a cautious and gradual return to work at the $20 billion Mozambique LNG project, three months after an evacuation triggered by the insurgents’ first assault on Palma.

The attacks also raise questions about future security in the greater Palma area, with one analyst asking why Mozambique’s government failed to act on intelligence that an assault was imminent.

In a statement emailed to Upstream, Total said "there are no victims among the staff employed on the site of the project in Afungi" and that it has decided to reduce to "a strict minimum level" the workforce at the site.

"Total’s absolute priority is to ensure the safety and security of the people who work on the project."

The company added that remobilisation of the project that was envisaged at the beginning of the week "is ... now suspended".

"Total trusts the government of Mozambique whose public security forces are currently working to take back the control of the area," said the statement, stressing that it is "monitoring very closely the situation, in conjunction with the authorities and the local teams".

The supermajor expressed "its sympathy and support to the people of Palma, to the relatives of the victims and those affected by the tragic events of the past days".

ACLED analyst Jasmine Opperman said: “This is not a surprise attack. There had been early warnings that Palma was going to be targeted three days (before the attack).”


She claimed that the information was passed on to foreign embassies and the Mozambican government, but the warnings were “ignored".

Speaking on South Africa’s ENCA news channel, she pointed out that 60,000 locals living in the area — as well as expatriate workers — fled the assault with many hiding in the bush or near beaches.

Opperman — who has worked in the intelligence community for decades — said the insurgents succeeded in occupying Palma, just as they did to the south, last year, in Mocimboa da Praia port.


Asked why the Southern African Development Community had not taken action despite years of talks, she described it as “a dinosaur organisation” that only “looks after certain parties’ interests” and has neither the military nor financial capacity to stem the Cabo Delgado insurgency.

Opperman believes only the European Union, US or United Nations have the ability to help resolve the situation, but warned that direct intervention over many years will only happen if Mozambique's President Filipe Nyusi approves it.

She said Nyusi’s intransigence on this matter poses “a risk to the region and not just Cabo Delgado".

A report carried by Pinnacle News on Saturday said about 180 people — including expatriate gas workers, who were trapped for three days in the Amarula Palma hotel — were evacuated, but that some died in an ambush after they left.

A convoy of vehicles sent to rescue those who had taken refuge in the hotel was reportedly ambushed.

Dewa Mavhinga, Southern Africa director at Human Rights Watch (HRW), stated: “Al-Shabaab fired on civilians in their homes and on the streets in Palma as they tried to flee for their lives.

"Mozambican authorities should move swiftly to protect civilians and bring all those responsible for abuses to account.”

HRW spoke by phone to seven witnesses to the violence in Palma before telephone lines went down on 24 March.

Separately, HRW and other groups have documented alleged abuses by government security forces and mercenary group Dyck Advisory Group (DAG) — which has been assisting Mozambican forces in Cabo Delgado province — during operations against Al-Shabaab, including excessive use of force, killings, kidnappings, arbitrary detention and ill-treatment of detainees.

Zitamar News reported on Tuesday — the day before the Palma attack — that South Africa’s DAG was due to pull out of Cabo Delgado next month.

Local and international news agencies said the government has revealed little about the attack — apart from a perfunctory confirmation on Thursday — while a lack of mobile telecommunications made it difficult to establish what was going on in Palma.

African Century, a local company that owns real estate in Palma, stated that its team of 19 of its workers and four customers “were successfully rescued on 27 March in the morning under heavy fire” and that “efforts continue to locate the remaining members of our team".

The company said Palma has been without communications since the beginning of the attacks.(Copyright)

 

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Devastation: Islamist militants have devastated villages in Cabo Delgado province in Mozambique over the past three years, with a non-governmental organisation recently reporting the beheading of childrenPhoto: AFP/SCANPIX

Insurgents in attack near Mozambique LNG site hours after Total said safe for workers' return​

Government confirms attack on Palma village, jeopardising workers' return to Afungi and raising more questions about security

25 March 2021 16:38 GMT UPDATED 25 March 2021 16:38 GMT
By Iain Esau

in London
Islamist insurgents have attacked Palma village in Mozambique close to Total’s Afungi liquefied natural gas complex, just hours after the French supermajor agreed it was safe for workers to gradually return to the construction site.

These latest attacks throw into turmoil plans to restart serious construction activities on Total’s $20 billion Mozambique LNG project.

They also raise questions about security in the Palma area, which, after an attack by insurgents in December 2020, led to non-essential staff being evacuated from the Afungi site.

On Wednesday, Total agreed that security had improved enough in the area — including a 25-kilometre protective cordon around Afungi — to allow workers to start returning.

The attacks also came weeks after the US designated ISIS-Mozambique as a terrorist organisation and agreed to deploy its elite forces to train Mozambique’s military.

ACLED security analyst Jasmine Opperman predicted that increased US involvement in Mozambique will likely escalate instability in the province.



Speaking to CapeTalk radio station in South Africa, she said the designation “was irresponsible and gives Islamic State the exact status it wanted. It is going to invigorate the insurgents. It is not a problem solver”.

Portuguese news agency Lusa broke the Palma attack story on Wednesday, with Mozambique’s normally reticent Ministry of Defence confirming the situation the following day.

A ministry spokesman said: “The defence and security forces are pursuing the enemy’s movement and are working tirelessly to restore security and order with the greatest speed.”



“The defence and security forces will do everything to ensure the security and well-being of the populations against the inhumane acts perpetrated by terrorists while continuing to ensure the protection of economic projects (and) safeguarding human rights,” he said.

Opperman tweeted that expatriate workers had been given a deadline of 4pm (GMT) on Thursday to be evacuated by sea from Palma, ahead of a major offensive by Mozambique’s military.

Total had not responded to requests for comment by Upstream before publication.

Lusa reported that workers of different nationalities linked to activities at the LNG site fled into the bush along with most residents after armed groups attacked the district headquarters, according to witnesses.



Citing local sources, the news agency said the Afungi site itself was not directly impacted.

The Palma attack came at the end of the rainy season, a time when it is more difficult to mount assaults.

The Defence Ministry said the assault began at 4.15pm local time when “terrorists attacked the village of Palma (from) three directions: the Pundanhar — Manguna crossroads, the Nhica do Rovuma road and the airfield”.

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Refugees: temporary houses in the Tara Tara district of Cabo Delgado, Mozambique, which is now home to internally displaced persons who fled their communities due to attacks by armed insurgents Photo: AFP/SCANPIX

Sources cited by AFP news agency said: “The militants are using heavy, new weapons that we have never seen before.”

The insurgency, which began in October 2017, has so far claimed 2600 lives, half of them civilians, while more than 670 000 people are refugees.(Copyright)

 
Mradi unaendelea vizur sana.Hiz ni porojo tu za huyu chawa.Katika mirad ambayo iko carefully planned basi ni huu ndio maana sio rahis kuuskia malalamiko mitandano.Nimepataga fursa ya kufanya kaz kwenye moja kampuni za kibongo zenye kandaras kwenye huu mradi na nisha attend meetings ambapo haya yashajadiliwa sana.Trust me the issue is smoothly going on inteligently executed...
 
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