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For
Immediate Release
Sept. 19,
2003
REPORT COUNTERS WORLD BANK'S "HIGH-RISK/HIGH-REWARD" STRATEGY
NGOs Predict Increased Conflict Around Risky World Bank Projects
Dubai, United
Arab Emirates - As World Bank representatives gather in Dubai for
the 2003 World Bank/IMF Annual Meetings, Environmental Defense,
Friends of the Earth, and International Rivers Network today released
a report in response to the World Bank's new "high-risk/high-reward"
strategy in the water, forestry, and extractive industries sectors.
The report, Gambling With People's Lives, analyzes the World Bank's
ability to manage social and environmental risks in high-risk projects
and to learn from its past mistakes. The report is available at
www.foe.org.
"The World
Bank is playing a reckless, high-stakes game of roulette, where
the poor - and not the Bank - stand to lose big," said Environmental
Defense policy analyst Shannon Lawrence. "While the Bank and
private investors are shielded from project risk, the communities
affected by its projects have no such guarantees."
One of the Bank's
most important environmental reforms of the 1990s was its more cautious
approach to high-risk infrastructure and forestry projects. This
policy is now being reversed. The World Bank recently announced
that it would re-engage in contentious water projects such as large
dams in what it refers to as a "high-risk/high-reward"
strategy. In 2002, the Bank dismissed its "risk-averse"
approach to the forest sector when it approved a new forest policy.
The World Bank is also considering support for new oil, mining,
and gas projects in unstable and poorly governed countries, against
the recommendations of its own evaluation unit.
"Big is
beautiful again, and in spite of their abysmal track record, megaprojects
are back in style at the World Bank," says Peter Bosshard,
policy director at International Rivers Network. "The Bank's
new high-risk strategy will prolong the deadlock in important sectors
such as water and electricity, and will block the development of
sustainable alternatives."
"Large
dam, forestry, and extractive industries projects funded by the
World Bank have displaced millions of people and devastated the
environment," said Carol Welch, international program director
at Friends of the Earth. "The Bank's spotty implementation
of its inadequate safeguard policies means that communities and
the environment will continue to face the greatest risks in World
Bank projects."
The report recommends,
among other things, that the World Bank repair the damage caused
by its previous high-risk projects, stay away from new high-risk
projects, and address the human rights dimensions of its work. The
report will be presented on Monday, September 22 at the Dubai Convention
Center, Room G-01 from 11:00 am-12:00 pm.
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Friends
of the Earth International is a federation of 68 environmental
organizations from all over the world that campaign on the most
urgent environmental and social issues of our day, while simultaneously
catalyzing a shift toward sustainable societies. Friends
of the Earth US is the U.S. arm of the federation.www.foei.org
and www.foe.org
International
Rivers Network (IRN) supports local communities working to protect
their rivers and watersheds. IRN works to halt destructive water
development projects, to promote sustainable alternatives, and to
change the policies of financial institutions, governments, and
the dam industry. www.irn.org
Environmental
Defense, a leading national nonprofit organization, represents
more than 300,000 members. Since 1967, Environmental Defense has
linked science, economics, law and innovative private-sector partnerships
to create breakthrough solutions to the most serious environmental
problems.
www.environmentaldefense.org
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