As Burma Opens, Critical NGOs look in | Asia Sentinel
William Boot, The Irrawaddy
Some international organizations urge foreign businesses to stay out until conditions improve
Although Burma is still far from being open and transparent on many
issues of business and financing, one consequence of the Thein Sein-led
reforms is that the outside world is looking in more closely and
critically.
In the past few weeks alone, Burma's business dealings have come under
close scrutiny from several international organizations, even urging
some foreign companies to reconsider doing business in Burma at all
until conditions improve.
Most of these organizations are based in the United States, where
President Thein Sein has just become the first Burmese leader to visit
the White House for almost half a century.
The latest call for caution comes from International Rivers, a US-based
environmental and human rights NGO, which today submitted a petition to
shareholders of the giant Chinese hydroelectric project developer
Sinohydro Corporation, whose annual meeting was held in Beijing.
Sinohydro is a joint-venture partner in planned massive hydroelectric
dam projects on the Salween River at Hat Gyi and Tasang in eastern
Burma.
"Local groups affected by Sinohydro's Tasang and Hat Gyi hydropower
projects are today urging Sinohydro at its Annual General Meeting to
wait until peace negotiations are completed and stability has been
established before taking any further actions to advance the projects,"
International Rivers told The Irrawaddy.
The dams are in Karen and Shan conflict zones.
"Field surveys in 2012 and 2013 conducted by Sinohydro and its
contractors have heightened tensions in the area. Militarization of the
dam sites has preceded each field survey, which has fueled anxiety and
tensions in the community because they have not been informed about the
projects, nor has their consent been obtained," said International
Rivers.
If the two hydro-dams went ahead, they would have a potential
electricity-generating capacity of 8,290 megawatts—more than that
planned for the halted Myitsone hydro project on the Irrawaddy River and
more than double Burma's current overall generating capacity.
Most of the planned Salween dam power is designated for transmission to
China and Thailand under current development agreements with the
Naypyidaw government, said the NGO Burma Rivers Network.
Another US-based NGO, the Revenue Watch Institute, has suggested that
Burma's future would be best served if all 30 of the offshore oil and
gas exploration blocks now open for bidding were won by companies only
from Norway, Britain and the United States.
Those three countries are the only ones out of 58 oil and gas producing
states which came close to a full score for good governance and
transparency. Burma came last in the institute's Resource Governance
Index, scoring less than 30 out of 100 points.
"Citizens lack access to fundamental information about the oil, gas and
mining sector. For instance, a country might provide little or no
information about which companies, domestic and foreign, operate in the
extractive sector, how much the government collects in resource revenues
and where those funds are allocated," said the institute in its report.
A business risk assessor said Burma's oil and gas sector was
particularly hazardous for foreign companies concerned about a possible
backlash from shareholders over bad publicity.
"In the medium term, foreign petroleum companies investing in [Burma]
will continue to face risks connected to deeply-entrenched corruption
and on-going human rights violation in the country," senior analyst Guo
Yu told The Irrawaddy.
"This is particularly pertinent as NGOs as well as foreign governments
actively monitor foreign investor activity in the country and are most
likely to publicly raise any concerns about their business practices,"
said Guo, from business risk assessors Maplecroft in Britain.
Maplecroft last week wrote a report on the reputational risks still facing well-known foreign companies doing business in Burma.
"Although foreign companies are permitted to own deep-water blocks,
onshore and offshore upstream production is still required to be shared
with local firms, predominantly the state-owned Myanmar Oil and Gas
Enterprise (MOGE). The commercial operations of these large [state-owned
enterprises] lack transparency, which fosters corruption, nepotism and
cronyism," Guo told The Irrawaddy.
Another US-based human rights NGO, Earthrights International, has
exposed the foreign business links in the ownership and operation of the
major oil and natural gas pipelines being built through Burma from the
coast into southwest China.
The pipelines have been largely constructed by the Chinese state oil
company China National Petroleum Corporation. Ownership of the oil line
is shared between CNPC and MOGE, but Earthrights has shown that the gas
pipeline is a partnership involving South Korean and Indian firms as
well.
Daewoo International holds a 25 percent stake in the gas pipeline, with
smaller shares held by Kogas, another Korean company, plus India's
state-owned ONG Videsh and GAIL.
Most foreign news reports make no mention of their commercial
involvement in a pipeline that NGOs allege has led to numerous human
rights abuses across Burma, including land theft, loss of homes and in
some cases forced labor.
"This is important because by leaving out the Korean and India
companies, they are in effect absolved of responsibility for the onshore
gas pipelines impacts," Earthrights' campaign director Paul Donowitz
told The Irrawaddy.
Daewoo International have acknowledged their participation and said they
were in contact with CNPC about "complaints of negative impacts,"
Donowitz said.
Winners of the bidding for the 30 offshore oil and gas blocks being offered by the Ministry of Energy are due to be announced.
(This first appeared in The Irrawaddy, with which Asia Sentinel has a content sharing agreement)
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