Каспинфо
март 2005

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Название: ПРОЕКТ БТД И ОБЩЕСТВЕННОСТЬ
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* Год назад МФК и ЕБРР приняли решение профинансировать проект нефтепровода БТД. До 25 марта производится сбор подписей под Меморандумом общественности об экологической и социальной опасности этого проекта.
(15.03.2005)


Полный Текст
ПРОЕКТ БТД И ОБЩЕСТВЕННОСТЬ
ПРОЕКТ БТД И ОБЩЕСТВЕННОСТЬ

***

PLEASE CIRCULATE!
APOLOGIES FOR CROSS-POSTING

Dear All,

The Baku Ceyhan Campaign in the UK has prepared the following Memorandum
summarising continuing human rights, environmental and safety concerns
relating to the ECA/IFC/EBRD-funded Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline. It is
intended to release the Memorandum in early April.

If you feel able to endorse the Memorandum, please respond by Friday 25
March to andersl@clara.co.uk. Please send your name, organization name and
country.

Thank you for your support!

Best Wishes

Nicholas Hildyard
The Corner House


One Year On: Memorandum on the State of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Oil Pipeline
Since Public Funding

Baku-Ceyhan Campaign[1], February 2005

It is now a year since the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), national export
credit agencies and 15 commercial banks signed loan agreements to provide
financing for BP's Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil pipeline. The BTC project
was controversial prior to funding, when a wide range of NGOs expressed
concern over the pipeline's likely impacts on human rights, democratic
development and the regional environment. The Baku-Ceyhan Campaign pointed
out the extent of the project's failure, even at the design stage, to comply
with international standards: its review of the Environmental Impact
Assessment for the Turkish sector of BTC found 173 violations of World Bank
standards and EU law.[2]



Nonetheless, financial institutions provided extensive support for the BTC
project, leading to questions as to whether they had carried out sufficient
due diligence. Subsequent events have substantiated rather than assuaged
these concerns. If the BTC project was controversial a year ago, it is more
so after the events of 2004, including:


a.. A UK parliamentary inquiry into widely documented problems of pipeline
safety, including allegations of falsified test results and failure to
report warnings over corrosion, and into ongoing human rights concerns;
b.. The withdrawal of one of the project's private backers, Banca Intesa,
citing serious failures of due diligence by project funders;
c.. The taking of BTC-related cases to both the European Court of Justice
(ECJ) and the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR);
d.. Whistleblower revelations in the media that the BTC pipeline is an
"environmental timebomb" due to shoddy workmanship and cost-cutting;
e.. Evidence that many of the problems in the region predicted by NGOs
have come to pass, including repression of democracy, alleged torture or
ill-treatment of local human rights defenders, unlawful expropriation of
land and major environmental damage.


After years of engaging with BP and financial institutions in good faith, we
find that many of the promises made to local people and NGOs that the BTC
pipeline would be beneficial, accountable and built to "the highest
international standards" have been broken. We believe that the institutions
that have financed the project have an obligation to rectify these very
serious failures and have compiled this memo to serve as a baseline for
future action.



1. Pipeline Safety

In February 2004 the Sunday Times revealed that both the
procurement process and the efficacy of a pipeline coating used in
Azerbaijan and Georgia were highly suspect. The coating is crucial in
protecting the pipeline from corrosion and resulting spills and ruptures. BP's
own consultant, Derek Mortimore, had warned BP that the chemistry of the
liquid epoxy coating chosen to seal the pipeline joints, SPC 2888, would
prevent it from adhering properly to the polyethylene (PE) exterior of the
pipeline. As a result, the coating would fail, allowing the ingress of
water, large-scale corrosion and perhaps even stress-based explosions. This
was despite repeated reassurances to the host countries that leakage would
be "virtually impossible." A second problem is that in cold weather the
coating cracks, again allowing in water. Mortimore told BP that if it used
the coating, it would be "completely out on a limb" and open to
"astronomical" repair costs and "open-ended" compensation cases.[3]

Although Mortimore lost his job and his reputation was smeared, his fears
were validated in November 2003, when BP secretly suspended construction
work on the Azeri and Georgian sectors of the project for ten weeks after
cracking was discovered in the coating. BP later admitted that more than a
quarter of the Georgian joints were cracked.[4] The company claims to have
rectified the cracking with heat treatment; however, experience in other
pipelines reveals that this solution does not work. Moreover, there remains
the fundamental incompatibility between the coating and PE-coated pipe-SPC
2888 simply cannot be made to adhere to polyethylene for the lifetime of the
project, and will inevitably peel away from the exterior.[5]

At the time, BP failed to disclose Mortimore's warnings to the financial
institutions which were in the process of deciding whether to fund the
pipeline. The financiers' claim that BP was under no obligation to make such
a disclosure lacks credibility, particularly given the material impact that
the coating's failure has had on the project. A report by independent
consultants Parsons Energy and Chemicals, which BP claimed would validate
SPC 2888, in fact notes that "these coatings are not fully compatible with
the polyethylene outer jacket". Disturbingly, it also says of the material
used on the Turkish sector, "Currently, there are 4 reported catastrophic
failures of this coating system on large diameter pipelines."[6] Despite the
potential severity of the safety problems, BP is now revealed to have
restricted the extent of testing that would uncover flaws, out of "a desire
to reduce repair frequency".[7]

Serious questions also remain over the procurement process for the coating.
BP's materials manager chose SPC 2888 before seven of eight selection tests
were undertaken, and nominated no alternative; field tests were done only
after application had begun. In the only study performed before the contract
was awarded, SPC 2888 was found to perform "poorly" in key tests, yet was
listed as coming top in the study. When the tests were repeated at the
behest of a competitor, SPC 2888 failed outright, leading the competitor to
accuse BP of "slanting" the results of the study and forcing BP to carry out
an internal corruption investigation. BP refuses to release the report of
the investigation, although it claims that it clears all parties.[8]

The influential parliamentary Trade and Industry Committee is undertaking an
inquiry into the UK Government's support for BTC through its export credit
agency, the Export Credits Guarantee Department (ECGD). During testimony
before the Committee on November 16 2004, senior ECGD officials admitted for
the first time that the coating system had no track record, contradicting
assurances given to MPs by former ECGD Minister Mike O'Brien in June 2004
and by the International Finance Corporation.[9] ECGD also claimed, again
contradicting repeated statements by BP and financial institutions, that,
"Expecting the BTC pipeline to operate safely without interventions for its
forty year life span would be remarkably optimistic." Industry experts
dispute this. As one has responded: "What would be remarkable was if they
have to intervene during its working life. We are engineers, not
soothsayers. Pipelines are designed on proven evidence to work. But in the
case of BTC it has an in-built flaw and will eventually fail."[10]



2. The Withdrawal of Banca Intesa and Lack of Due Diligence by Financial
Institutions

In December 2004, one of BTC's private backers, Banca Intesa,
confirmed that it is seeking to withdraw from the BTC project as a direct
result of safety and reputational concerns. The bank offloaded one-third of
its $60 million stake at a loss, and is finding it difficult to secure
takers for the remainder.[11] According to Michael Gillard, "The Italian
bank had only agreed to invest because of the involvement of the World
Bank," assuming that extensive due diligence by the IFC and other financial
institutions would have picked up safety and other risks. Instead, severe
failures of that due diligence reportedly left Banca Intesa "very disturbed"
and "staggered".[12]

The manifest failures of due diligence by the IFC, ECGD and
other financial institutions and private banks are of immense concern, not
only for the safety of this project but for the whole system of
infrastructure funding. The financial institutions were not informed of
Mortimore's allegations by BP and did not require the company to submit all
relevant reports.[13] Despite BP itself admitting that the coating system
was untried,[14] the financial institutions required no special due
diligence measures, instead misrepresenting the coating's track record as
extensive. Neither did their monitoring regimes pick up the problems of
cracking, about which they learned only through the press.[15] Financial
institutions also made no independent investigation of the procurement fraud
allegations, but simply accepted the findings of the company's own
unreleased internal investigation.[16]

Despite repeated requests, since the safety concerns were first raised
financial institutions have refused to take any significant measures to hold
BP and its contractors to account; instead, many detailed NGO critiques of
the BTC project continue to go unanswered. Funders have also consistently
come to the defence of BP even after serious violations of loan agreements
have been documented, a pattern also demonstrated prior to funding.[17]
Funders continue to rely almost exclusively on BP for information and fact
verification (although the company consistently fails to pass on critical
information to financial institutions or even to its own independent
consultants[18]) and refuse to meet with informed critics of the
project.[19] It remains unclear exactly what would be required for project
funders to take a more caustic view of BP's conduct, let alone to take
tangible corrective action.



3. Human Rights Cases at the ECJ and ECHR

In January 2004, on behalf of Cemender Korkmaz, a Turkish
landowner affected by the BTC project, the Corner House and the Kurdish
Human Rights Project (KHRP) applied to the Court of First Instance to take
the European Commission (EC) to the European Court of Justice (ECJ). The
case centres on the failure of the EC to act regarding apparent breaches of
Turkey's Accession Partnership with the European Union.[20] In particular,
the Host Government Agreements, the legal contracts for the BTC pipeline
between BP and the three host nations, move Turkey away from the acquis
communitaires necessary for EU accession.[21]

In the same month, KHRP also filed cases with the European Court
of Human Rights on behalf of 38 affected villagers along the route, alleging
multiple violations of the European Convention on Human Rights including
Article 1 of Protocol 1 (the right to peaceful enjoyment of property),
Article 8 (the right to respect for private and family life), Article 13
(the right to an effective remedy) and Article 14 (convention rights to be
secured without discrimination). Human rights violations alleged by the
villagers during BTC construction include the illegal use of land without
payment of compensation or expropriation, underpayment for land,
intimidation, lack of public consultation, involuntary resettlement and
damage to land and property.



More specifically, on the ground research by non-governmental organisations
has documented:

(i) Minimal or no consultation prior to BTC commencing;

(ii) Documents being circulated in English, despite villagers
being Kurdish or Turkish speakers;

(iii) Failure to inform landowners and communities of the dangers of
the pipeline;

(iv) Landowners being misinformed about their legal rights - for
example, many were told that if they went to court they would receive no
compensation or reduced compensation, or that they had no right to challenge
the compensation paid;

(v) Problems obtaining legal advice and representation due to
local lawyers being employed by BOTAS;

(vi) No negotiation on the level of compensation - despite
negotiation being a requirement of the Turkish Expropriation law;

(vii) Use of Article 27, a provision which allows land to be
expropriated for military purposes or in "national emergencies", as a threat
to coerce villagers into signing over their land;

(viii) Cases of landowners granting BOTAS power of attorney after
signing blank pieces of paper;

(ix) Meetings being held in Turkish when the landowners spoke
Kurdish as their first language;

(x) Cases of landowners only being told of the amount they would
receive in compensation after they had signed over their land;

(xi) Cases of compensation being far less than landowners were
originally promised;

(xii) Generalised failure of compensation to reflect the true value
of the land expropriated and the losses incurred;

(xiii) Complaints that a significant proportion of compensation has
been eaten up by travel costs to attend meetings with BOTAS etc;

(xiv) Cases of landowners being threatened where they refused to
accept the compensation on offer;

(xv) Cases of land being entered without compensation first being
agreed and paid;

(xvi) Cases of the pipeline route being altered without compensation
being paid for the affected land;

(xvii) Cases of villagers not being informed that they were eligible for
compensation for use of common land through the RAP fund, a special fund set
up under the project's Resettlement Action Plan (RAP);

(xviii) Cases of villagers - particularly poorer tenants - possibly having
to leave their villages in search of employment because the compensation
they received was too low to allow them to continue farming;

(xix) Promises of community development programmes - such as medical
centres - that never materialised;

(xx) Villagers having to pay towards community development schemes
that have been implemented; and

(xxi) Concerns regarding the environmental hazards inherent in living
or working on land in such close proximity to the pipeline.



4. Continuing Social, Environmental and Human Rights Concerns



There is evidence of malfeasance and corruption in the acquisition of land
all along the route. In Turkey, the use of Emergency Powers under Article 27
of the Turkish Constitution to expropriate land before compensation has been
agreed, has been much more widespread than promised. The use of Article 27,
except in exceptional and limited circumstances, is a clear-cut violation
of IFC OD 4.30, which unequivocally states that compensation must be
negotiated and paid before displacement,[22] and its use represents a
serious indictment of BP's preparatory work. In its November 2002
Resettlement Action Plan (RAP), BP was emphatic that this article would only
be used "when other avenues have failed".[23] Yet the CDAP notes that,
"BOTAS used Article 27 to acquire slightly less than half of the privately
owned parcels along the first 331 kilometres of right-of-way. This trend of
much greater-than-anticipated reliance on Article 27 has broadly continued
as the land acquisition process moves towards completion."[24]

The result for affected people is vastly greater uncertainty and inability
to get payment than promised, a condition worsened by ongoing state
intimidation and surveillance in the region and the limited extent to which
Turkish political reforms have reached the North-East region. Villagers have
also expressed concern at unpaid expropriation of land outside the 28m
corridor, discrimination against minorities, failure to pay for ancillary
damage and lack of land restoration.[25]

During the Baku-Ceyhan Campaign's most recent mission to the region in
October 2004, non-governmental organisations (NGOs) found a prevailing
feeling in Azerbaijan of lack of project ownership and fear of potential
negative consequences from BTC, largely due to very poor public
consultation. Many villagers are unaware of the Community Investment
Programmes (CIPs), while others claim to have been promised CIPs that as yet
have not materialised.

In both Azerbaijan and Georgia, very few jobs have been created for local
communities currently suffering from severe unemployment, despite widespread
media pledges that the project would generate plentiful work. Many local
people raised concerns over exploitation and lack of insurance for workers,
corruption in recruitment and the outlawing of trade unions. Partly in
consequence, there have been hundreds of strikes and disruptions to
construction work, notably in the Krtsanisi and Borjomi regions, including
more than 80 in the first six months of construction alone.[26] Corruption
by officials in assigning land compensation, for both privately owned and
municipal land, is an enormous worry in both countries. Concerns have also
been raised regarding illegal occupation by BP of land not formally sold.

In Georgia, as well as to some extent in Azerbaijan, ancillary damage is a
real and frequent concern for villagers. BTC construction works have damaged
many roads, drainage and irrigation systems. In many cases no repair has
been carried out. In the Borjomi region of Georgia, construction has created
significant water pollution which, according to local communities, has had a
negative impact on tourism. The construction work across the country also
produces many complaints from villagers about dust and noise pollution, for
which BTC has paid no compensation.

Violation of obligations in BTC's environmental permit led the Georgian
Government to suspend work in the Borjomi region in July. When the Ministry
of the Environment wrote to BP ordering a halt to work, the company ignored
the order and continued excavation. The Government forcibly stopped
construction activities two weeks later. According to the Independent, the
resumption of construction after a further two weeks came as a direct result
of political pressure, the decision being announced immediately after an
unscheduled meeting between President Saakashvili and US Secretary of
Defense Donald Rumsfeld.[27] Violations of law in Borjomi are particularly
disturbing given the national sensitivity over risks of damage to the
culturally, economically and ecologically important Borjomi National Park,
the promises made by BP that leaks were virtually impossible, and the
process through which the environmental permit was originally issued.[28]



5. Revelations of Unsafe Construction by Former Pipeline Engineers

On 26 June 2004, a front-page article in the Independent called
BTC an "environmental timebomb", and documented a catalogue of engineering
failures, cost-cutting mistakes and safety violations on the Turkish leg of
the project, revealed by engineers who had previously worked on BTC.[29]
Problems included the failure of between 80 and 100% of tested welds;
constant safety violations, including the use of carcinogenic materials
without protection; lack of basic documentation, making work impossible to
verify; effluent discharge into surrounding rivers; nepotism and the hiring
of wholly unqualified staff; ignoring of earthquake risks; damage to local
land and businesses; and mass failure to pay pipeline workers and local
contractors. Staff that raised these problems were customarily fired. "This
project is unique. It's a complete mess-up:.everything is being done badly.
No-one wants this project on their CV. It's an embarrassment," said one
former employee.[30]

The engineers blamed the safety problems on the contract signed between BP
and the Turkish state contractor BOTAS, the Turnkey Agreement. The Agreement
provides BOTAS with a relatively low sum, $1.3 billion, to complete its leg
of the project; the Turkish state bears all cost overruns, and is also
subject to heavy fines if the project is delayed. This has created a strong
incentive for BOTAS to cut corners to save both time and money.

As a result, as the former Engineering Manager on one section of the
project, Dennis Adams, puts it, "It is quite obvious that BP are not in
control of the Turkish section of this pipeline." BP has tried and failed to
correct BOTAS's conduct by putting them on notice, but to no avail.[31] "The
biggest mistake was having BOTAS on the job.In a nutshell, they are totally
unprofessional. They don't listen either to BP or to their sub-contractors,"
says another engineer. This echoes the concerns of BP's independent
monitoring body, the Caspian Development Advisory Panel (CDAP), which had,
"serious questions about the political commitment by the responsible Turkish
government ministries to ensure that the pipeline is constructed and
operated in compliance with the environmental, health, and safety standards
stipulated."[32]



6. Worsening Political Problems in the Region

A disturbing number of problems raised by NGOs prior to funding
have since worsened, such as regional stability. In October 2003, during the
IFI consultation period, the Azeri government carried out what Human Rights
Watch has described as "a well-organised campaign of fraud throughout the
country", involving mass arrests, detention and torture of the political
opposition,[33] to ensure the first father to son dynastic transfer of power
in the post-Soviet states. Financial institutions showed no concern, even
when new president Ilham Aliyev indicated in his inauguration speech that
Azerbaijan would use oil revenues to wage war on Armenia. In December 2004,
Aliyev made his intention clear in a speech in London. "We will never put up
with the occupation of our land, these territories must be liberated from
occupation. Armenia will not be able to go against us."[34]

Georgia's new president, Mikheil Saakashvili, is also making threats of war,
appointing a new minister of defence to head the armed forces "until the
country's territorial integrity is restored."[35] Saakashvili also described
the Georgian agreement for BTC as "a horrible contract, really horrible,"
suggesting high-level political dissatisfaction with the project. A recent
report from the Georgian Human Rights and Information Documentation Centre,
entitled, "One Step Forward, Two Steps Back: Human Rights in Georgia after
the 'Rose Revolution'", says of Georgia, "the rule of law is still being
ignored and the country is best characterised by an impunity syndrome in an
atmosphere of terror."[36]

Individual human rights defenders in the region have been
monitored, detained and, in one instance, allegedly subjected to torture and
ill-treatment. One prominent human rights defender and chairman of the legal
political party DEHAP in Ardahan's central district in northeast Turkey,
Ferhat Kaya, was detained and allegedly tortured in May 2004, called a
"terrorist" and "traitor" and later charged with "assaulting and insulting
police officers". There is a strong likelihood that his treatment was
connected to his efforts to gain promised compensation for people affected
by the BTC pipeline, work which BP has previously encouraged local NGOs and
political organisations to help them with. "I am being subjected to these
kinds of practices because I have been protecting the rights of the victims
whose lands are affected by the BTC pipeline. The practices against me are
completely political. They are motivated systematically to intimidate and
deter me," says Mr Kaya.[37]



These developments make for grim reading, not least because NGOs
warned financial institutions in advance and detail of many of these risks,
only to find their concerns ignored through manifest failures of due
diligence. At a time when the IFC seeks to weaken the mandatory standards
applicable to large-scale infrastructure projects, the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline
stands as a telling illustration of the need for stronger not weaker
policies, and for a credible commitment to ensuring the real implementation
of those policies on the ground. The need for policy implementation is all
the more urgent given that the BTC project is over budget (current estimates
now exceed $4 billion[38]) and behind schedule, giving even stronger
incentives to BP and its contractors to cut corners and increase safety
risks.

Despite the evident failure of the lenders to fulfil their
monitoring function thus far, we are still strongly committed to
collaborating with international funders in order to ensure that these
serious problems are resolved. In particular, we urge financial institutions
to address the coating issue with all possible seriousness, and reiterate in
the strongest terms the urgent need for an independent audit of the pipeline
to ensure that the environmental and social damage that BTC now threatens
never comes to pass. We should be grateful for a response as a matter of
priority.



Yours etc.



Anders Lustgarten,

Baku-Ceyhan Campaign, UK



Nicholas Hildyard,

The Corner House, UK



Hannah Ellis,

Friends of the Earth (England, Wales and Northern Ireland)



Kerim Yildiz,

Kurdish Human Rights Project, UK



Greg Muttitt,

PLATFORM, UK



Jan Cappelle,

Projecto Gato, Belgium



Aaron Goldzimer,

Environmental Defense, USA



Antonio Tricarico,

Campagna per la Riforma della Banca Mondiale, Italy



Manana Kochladze,

CEE Bankwatch Network, Georgia



Nino Gujaraidze,

Green Alternative, Georgia



Kai Schaefer,

WEED, Germany



Sebastian Godinot,

Amis de la Terre, France



Petr Hlobil,

CEE Bankwatch, Czech Republic



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Nicholas Hildyard, The Corner IHouse
Tel: +44 (0)1258 473795