Posted: 05/23/2012 12:49 pm ...
Some projects are so destructive that no reputable actors want to get
involved with them. Think of the oil wells in Sudan's conflict zones,
China's Three Gorges Dam,
and the gas pipelines in Burma. If the price is right, however, some
will still be tempted to do business on such projects through the back
door. The World Bank is currently taking such an approach with a big
credit for Ethiopia's power sector.
The Gibe III Dam,
now under construction in Southwest Ethiopia, will devastate ecosystems
that support 500,000 indigenous people in the Lower Omo Valley and
around Kenya's Lake Turkana. The U.N.'s World Heritage Committee called on the Ethiopian government to
"immediately halt all construction" on the project, which will impact
several sites of universal cultural and ecological value. In August
2011, the Kenyan parliament passed a resolution asking for the
suspension of dam construction pending further studies.
Ethiopia is one of the world's highest recipients of foreign aid, and in spite of a poor record on human rights, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi
is one of the darlings of the international community. The World Bank,
the African Development Bank and the European Investment Bank all
considered funding for the Gibe III Dam in 2009-10. In the end, none of
them got involved in a project that caused an international outcry and
clearly violated their social and environmental safeguard policies.
The World Bank would like to turn Ethiopia and the Democratic
Republic of Congo into regional hydropower "batteries" that can
electrify large parts of Africa. Doing so would require the construction
of large dam cascades and extensive transmission networks in Eastern
and Central Africa. The record of dam building in Ethiopia and the Congo
is such that the World Bank is not keen to get involved with these
messy projects directly. Instead it plans to pour large amounts of
foreign aid into the transmission lines on which the power projects
depend.
On June 21, the World Bank is expected to submit to its Board of Directors a credit of $684 million
for a 1,000-kilometer-long transmission line from Ethiopia to Kenya.
Strong evidence links this transmission line to the Gibe III Dam. The Resettlement Action Plan,
an official project document, states that the line "is planned to
provide reliable power supply to Kenya by taking it from Ethiopia's
Gilgel Gibe hydropower scheme." In a letter to Friends of Lake Turkana,
an environmental group, the Bank confirmed in March 2010 that the
Ethiopian government had "asked the World Bank to consider providing
funding support to the Gibe III hydropower project and the associated
transmission lines."
Now that the impacts of the Gibe III Dam have become so publicly
apparent, the Bank no longer wants to be associated with it. In a
meeting last month with environmental organizations, Bank managers
claimed that the transmission line would not be used to export
electricity from the mega-dam on the Omo River. The Bank even edited the
Resettlement Action Plan and replaced the reference to Gibe by "from
Ethiopia's power grid" in its version of the document.
Transmission lines and power projects depend on each other. If
transmission lines become a focus of the World Bank's development aid
for Africa, the institution needs to clarify where the electricity for
these projects will come from. It needs to prove that the power for
these systems can be generated without destroying critical ecosystems
and violating human rights, in compliance with the Bank's own standards.
Organizations such as Christian Aid and International Rivers have documented that Africa's power needs can be addressed without building destructive dams in Ethiopia and the Congo.
On May 21, a coalition of environmental organizations from Kenya, the
U.S. and Europe raised these concerns with the World Bank. In a letter to Bank President Robert Zoellick,
they argued that "the Bank should not fund a transmission line that
would source its power from the Gibe III Dam or from any other project
that massively violates its safeguard policies." The World Bank is
supposed to reduce poverty, not maximize profits. If a project is so
destructive that it cannot be funded directly, the Bank should not
support it through the back door of a transmission line.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-bosshard/world-bank-ethiopia-kenya_b_1537932.html
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