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chad-cameroon oil pipeline

The Chad-Cameroon Oil and Pipeline Project is the biggest private investment in sub Sahara Africa today.

brokenpromises

read the press release: international organisations support chadian day of mourning, while banks and exxon celebrate the chad-cameroon pipeline

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project overview

The Chad-Cameroon Oil and Pipeline Project is the biggest private investment in sub Sahara Africa today. It involves the drilling of 300 oil wells in the Doba region in the south of Chad and the construction of a 1070 km pipeline to transport the oil from Chad through Cameroon to an offshore loading facility at the Atlantic Coast. The offshore terminal facility will be connected to the port of Kribi by an 11 km underwater pipeline. Total production will be 225.000 barrels a day. The project sponsors are ExxonMobil of the U.S (operator, with 40% of the private equity), Petronas of Malaysia (35%) and Chevron of the U.S (25%). The project is estimated to cost $3.7 billion.

world bank involvement

On June 6 2000, the International Finance Corporation approved lending for the Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project. At the same time, the Board of the World Bank approved two IDA loans for two related capacity-building projects in Chad and Cameroon. Earlier that year, the Bank had already approved an IDA credit for the revenue management in Chad.

The World Bank Group, while financing only 4% of the total cost, is the most important partner in the project. The oil consortium views the participation of the Bank as a political risk insurance which enabled it to raise more money on international capital markets. The Bank presented the project as an opportunity for Chad to come out of its acute poverty while generating much needed revenue for Cameroon. As a response to pressure from donor governments and NGOs, the World Bank appointed a high-level International Advisory Group to oversee the project's implementation with particular attention to social and environmental safeguards.

In both 2001 and 2002, local groups filed a claim with the World Bank Inspection Panel .

environmental and social concerns

NGOs in the two countries and abroad called upon the Bank to postpone the decision for two years until an adequate Environmental Impact Assesment (EIA) had been conducted. After approval of the project by the Bank they insisted on a well-designed project that would take into account the general interests of the citizens of the two countries. However, by mid 2002, with construction of the pipeline and drilling of oil wells well underway, the Chad-Cameroon pipeline has caused numerous environmental and social problems.

Cameroon has some of the most biologically diverse and important forests in Africa.The project threatens valuable ecosystems, particularly in Cameroon's coastal rainforest. The corridor of the pipe cuts straight across these sensitive ecosystems. Project-related upgrading of existing seasonal roads has lead to logging and illegal poaching in otherwise inaccessible areas. The pipeline traverses several major rivers and construction has caused already oil spills and pollution of the water system, much-needed for drinking water. Although the consortium has foreseen a plan against leakages and oil spills, this has been described by the U.S Office of the Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide as 'fundamentally flawed'.

Thousands of people have had their lands expropriated, crops and other plants destroyed and water sources polluted without adequate compensation. Some victims received no compensation at all, as in the case of the Bakola and Bagyeli ('pygmees') in the forest zone in Cameroon.

Although about 5,000 jobs were promised at the beginning of the project, the situation today is very precarious as most jobs are given out to expatriates, while locals are only called in for manual labour in a rotative manner. The influx of largely male job seekers into the project area has led to serious social disruption of the communities, with prostitution, alcohol abuse, HIV/AIDS and other Sexually Transmitted Diseases all on the rise.

The Bank's claim that communities supported and NGOs provided input into the project must be questioned. The U.S State Department confirms that the Cameroonian goverment impedes work of NGOs and that its security forces conduct illegal searches and harass citizens. Corruption in the country is rampant; Cameroon is actually the world's "most corrupt" country according to Transparency International. This effectively hampers true citizen participation in decision-making about the project. The Chadian human rights situation is highly problematic as well. The government has still not investigated massacres of hundreds of unarmed civilians that took place between 1997 and 1998 in the country's oil producing region. The situation in both countries makes it unlikely that the project will benefit those who need it most.

In conclusion, the pipeline is a classic example of a large-scale development project that will benefit multinational corporations at the expense of the poor, and that will exacerbate inequities and human rights abuses.

more information

read more on this site

Traversing People's Lands; How the World Bank finances community disruption in Cameroon

Report Broken Promises; Profit at any cost?

Video Broken Promises; If this is development, you can keep it!

Read about the Chad-Cameroon Oil Pipeline project on the web site of FoE Cameroon (in French)

 

 

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