http://www.motherjones.com/news/outfront/2003/02/ma_216_01.html

Public Money in the Pipeline

When ExxonMobil and BP need millions to pay for their oil projects, 
who do they turn to? The U.S. government.

By Daphne Eviatar
January/February 2003 Issue

The pipeline will begin on the outskirts of Baku, where oil rigs rise 
from the Caspian Sea and the hazy yellow sky reeks of petroleum. From 
the capital of Azerbaijan, it will cross more than 1,000 miles of 
rough terrain, stretching through Georgia and Turkey. When it is 
completed, it is expected to provide Western markets with 1 million 
barrels of oil a day -- and to provide a gusher of profits to the 
consortium of 10 companies headed by British Petroleum that is 
developing the project.

But regional conflicts and uncertain production make the $3.5 billion 
pipeline so risky that the oil executives who devised the venture 
don't want to pay for it -- and the commercial banks they normally 
deal with don't want to lend them the money. So the oil companies are 
turning to another big lender for help: Uncle Sam. The U.S. 
government, which helped broker the pipeline deal and has paid for 
engineering studies in Azerbaijan, is expected to provide as much as 
$500 million this year to help finance the project, supplying some of 
the world's wealthiest companies with what British Petroleum CEO John 
Browne calls "free public money."

á Pipe Dreams
á An Oily Quagmire
á The Baku Blues

á Export-Import Bank of the United States
á Export-Import Bank White Paper from Foreign Policy in Focus
á Export-Import Bank Issues from Congressman Bernie Sanders.
á BP in Azerbaijan

The Baku pipeline is hardly an isolated example. Under the energy 
plan developed by Vice President Dick Cheney, the Bush administration 
is financing a growing number of overseas projects for private oil 
companies. In theory, the money provided by two U.S. agencies -- the 
Export-Import Bank (Ex-Im) and the Overseas Private Investment 
Corporation (OPIC) -- is supposed to boost trade and create jobs. But 
in practice, say critics across the political spectrum, the agencies 
enrich a handful of well-connected oil companies. "The majority of 
Ex-Im Bank funding benefits large, politically powerful 
corporations," says Rep. Ron Paul, a Republican from Texas.

The roster of those receiving government financing over the past year 
certainly includes some of the country's largest oil and gas 
companies. In Baku, financing for the pipeline will assist two U.S. 
oil giants, Unocal and Amerada Hess. In Indonesia, where Bush 
promised increased U.S. financing to secure support for his war on 
terrorism, OPIC loaned Unocal $350 million to develop an oil and gas 
field. In Russia, OPIC provided

116 million in loan guarantees to Marathon Oil and Royal Dutch/Shell 
for a project off Sakhalin Island, and Ex-Im pledged $300 million for 
several other private oil projects. And in Nigeria, the export bank 
provided $135 million in October to help a subsidiary of Halliburton 
-- the company where Cheney served as CEO -- expand a natural-gas 
production facility. Over the past decade, the two agencies have 
provided $32 billion in loans and guarantees for corporate energy 
projects. Intent on expanding oil reserves beyond the Middle East, 
President Bush has nearly doubled the Export-Import Bank's authority 
to assume debt, to $100 billion. "Obviously, the U.S. government is 
looking at alternative sources of oil to diversify our consumption," 
says Bo Ollison, a spokesman for the agency. "We are part of the 
strategy."

But while the government is helping oil companies tap new markets, 
the public financing is doing little to achieve its stated goal of 
creating jobs. Since 2000, the two largest oil companies subsidized 
by Ex-Im -- ExxonMobil and ChevronTexaco -- have actually slashed 
their workforces by more than 20,000. Oil and gas companies that 
apply for financing are not required to submit any information on the 
economic impact of their projects, and many of the documents they do 
provide are kept secret even from those charged with monitoring the 
agencies. "We don't have a lot of confidence in the process," says 
Thea Lee, the AFL-CIO's chief international economist, who sits on an 
Ex-Im advisory committee. "There's simply no way to know whether it's 
helping support U.S. jobs."

Overseas, the loans contain no safeguards against corruption or human 
rights abuses, and applicants do not have to meet even the minimal 
environmental standards mandated by the World Bank. The Unocal 
project in Indonesia has polluted rice fields and fishing waters; 
when residents held a protest in October 2000, state security forces 
shot and beat nearly two dozen demonstrators. In Cameroon, where 
ExxonMobil has received $500 million in U.S. financing for a 
pipeline, international observers say the project has destroyed 
rainforest and fueled a public health crisis. And in Russia, 
environmentalists warn that oil projects off Sakhalin Island threaten 
11 endangered species, including the Western Pacific gray whale.

In Azerbaijan, where the U.S.-backed pipeline broke ground in 
September, the CIA reports that "corruption is ubiquitous." Few 
observers expect the project to help the nearly two-thirds of Azeris 
who live in poverty. "People are afraid the pipeline won't benefit 
them," says Farda Asadov, director of the Open Society Institute's 
office in Azerbaijan.

Given Bush's oil agenda, however, the flow of tax dollars to support 
such projects is likely to increase. In October, the president 
nominated Philip Merrill, the publisher of Washingtonian magazine and 
a major Republican donor, to chair the board of the Export- Import 
Bank, which after January will be filled exclusively with Bush 
appointees. And those looking for reform from a new advisory 
committee created to shift Ex-Im's financing toward renewable energy 
sources are likely to be disappointed. To head the Renewable Energy 
Exports Advisory Committee, Bush has named W. Henson Moore, a board 
member of the world's largest supplier of uranium for nuclear power 
plants.

Biofuels at Journey to Forever
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html
Biofuel at WebConX
http://webconx.green-trust.org/2000/biofuel/biofuel.htm
List messages are archived at the Info-Archive at NNYTech:
http://archive.nnytech.net/
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ 


Reply via email to