NEW DATABASE CALCULATES LIFETIME
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS FROM NINE YEARS OF WORLD BANK FOSSIL FUEL
PROJECTS
First-of-its-kind resource
catalogues $20 billion in dirty energy projects since 1992
The World Bank has invested over $20 billion in
more than 200 projects that extract, transport, or burn fossil fuels
since 1992, according to a first-of-its-kind global database launched
today by the Institute for Policy Studies.
This new resource for journalists, researchers
and observers of international finance and energy policy comes on
the eve of two major events related to the ongoing debate on climate
change: the global climate negotiations beginning on October 29,
2001, in Marrakech, and the World Bank ?s new Extractive Industries
Review beginning also on October 29 in Brussels.
The Institute for Policy Studies? (IPS) online
database, available at www.seen.org, catalogues all World Bank-financed
fossil fuel projects on a map-based database, together with each
project's anticipated lifetime greenhouse gas emissions. IPS found
that the sum of lifetime emissions from World Bank projects financed
from 1992 to the present will exceed 40 billion tons of carbon dioxide,
a figure almost two times that of all global emissions from burning
or flaring fossil fuels in 1998.
At a time when global leaders are doing all they
can to stop the potentially catastrophic effects of global warming,
this database demonstrates that the World Bank?s fossil fuel investments
are contributing to the problem in a big way,? said Daphne Wysham,
director of the Sustainable Energy and Economy Network (SEEN), a
project of IPS.
The World Bank is home to the key institution created
during the Climate Convention at the 1992 Earth Summit, the Global
Environmental Facility (GEF), which is charged with the task of
financing alternative energy and energy efficiency projects. However,
over the same time period, IPS research found that the World Bank
and the GEF, together, have invested barely $1billion on a few dozen
energy efficiency and renewable energy initiatives. Fossil fuels,
some World Bank staffers claim, are essential building blocks in
development. However, experience in the field and even the Bank's
own internal studies suggest the exact opposite: overweening emphasis
on fossil fuel investments has actually hampered progress in many
developing countries, and often results in the impoverishment of
the very people the Bank is intended to serve.
"From the local level, where fossil fuels extraction
results in resettlement, civil unrest and environmental degradation,
to the global level, where these fossil fuels lead to global warming,
investment in oil, gas and coal is destabilizing for all of us,'
said Wysham.
The IPS global database follows previous SEEN reports
that covered World Bank financing from 1992 to 1997, and from 1997
to 1998. In response to SEEN research, which catalyzed parliamentary
hearings in Europe on World Bank fossil fuel investments, World
Bank President James Wolfensohn pledged at the Earth Summit+5 in
New York in 1997 to calculate greenhouse gas emissions for World
Bank energy projects, and "where there is cause for concern, explore
more climate-friendly options." However, that pledge has proven
hollow, as World Bank fossil fuel lending has remained constant
at over $2 billion per year.
Growing worldwide criticism of the World Bank?s
fossil fuel investments has prompted the Bank to undertake a major,
year-long review of its oil, gas, and mining projects, to be launched
October 29 in Brussels (see www.eireview.org).
"The World Bank's proposed review of its extractive
industries should begin with a recognition that there is a body
of evidence that suggests fossil fuel lending is bad for development,
the environment, and human rights" said Steve Kretzmann, SEEN Campaign
Coordinator. ?The Bank must face the fact that lending for fossil
fuels runs directly counter to its stated goals of poverty alleviation
and sustainable development," Kretzmann added.
VITAL STATISTICS FROM THE
SEEN GLOBAL DATABASE (current through Sept. 30, 2001)
Fossil fuel financing, World Bank Group,
since 1992: $20.8 billion
Estimated lifetime carbon dioxide emissions
from these projects: 40.6 billion tons
Worldwide carbon dioxide emissions
from consumption/flaring of fossil fuels 1999: 22.3
billion tons
Renewable energy/energy efficiency
financing, World Bank Group, since 1992: $900
million
Number of World Bank Group renewable
energy/energy efficiency projects, since 1992: 30
Number of World Bank Group fossil fuel
projects, since 1992: 212
Top three recipient countries of World
Bank fossil fuel aid since 1992: India
($3.196 billion), China ($2.914
billion), Russia ($2.890 billion)
Total megawatts, fossil fuel power
plant generation capacity financed by World Bank since 1992: 39,423MW
Total megawatts, existing solar power
plant generation capacity worldwide, 2000: 300MW