Peter Bosshard's picture
Policy Director
This blog offers updates, independent analysis and comments on international financial relations, the environment, and dams. As International Rivers' Policy Director and before, the coordinator of a Swiss NGO, I have advocated for human rights and the environment for more than 20 years. When I'm not at work, I spend time with my family, hike, and visit the opera. My favorite river is the Albula in the Swiss Alps.

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World Bank: Lending Up For Coal and Large Hydro, Down For Renewables

According to a report soon to be released by Oil Change International, the World Bank Group increased its lending for coal by an astonishing 256% in 2008. Lending for large hydropower projects increased from $751 million to $1,007 million. Support for renewable energy stagnated at a low level.

According to the new report, World Bank support for all fossil fuels combined amounted to $3,061 million in 2008. The Bank’s lending for energy efficiency increased sharply to $1.192 million. In comparison, support for new renewable energy technologies such as wind, solar, biomass and hydropower projects of less than 10 megawatts amounted to only $476 million.

This figure for new renewables includes projects which the Bank funded with resources from the Global Environment Facility and with carbon credits. If only the institution’s own resources are considered, the Bank spent a meager $280 million on new renewables in 2008. According to an independent analysis by the Bank Information Center, support for renewables was lower in 2008 than in 2007. (The World Bank’s financial year runs from July 1 to June 30.)

The World Bank would like to redefine itself as a major actor against climate change (and grab the large amounts of resources which governments are committing for this task). The institution clearly needs to do its own homework before it can become a credible agent against climate change.

The new report is being co-published by Oil Change International, the Institute for Policy Studies, Friends of the Earth, and the Campagna per la Riforma della Banca Mondiale.

Peter Bosshard is the policy director of International Rivers. His blog, Wet, Wild and Wonky, appears at www.internationalrivers.org/en/blog/peter-bosshard

 

Comments

We must really take good

We must really take good care of our environment as it is a good source of renewable energy. Recently, the Treasury of the United States is fraught with peril.  They also can’t seem to be able to hire anybody.  The third candidate for the Deputy Treasury Secretary has just thrown in the towel, and declined the position, another in a long line of problems with picks for the Obama cabinet.  The most recent declining candidate, H. Rodgin Cohen is counsel for numerous Wall Street firms. His relationship with them would be a conflict of interest, as the Treasury has been the one making personal loans to Wall Street firms.  The first dropped, most predictably, for tax discrepancies.  It is often hard to find good help, and this evidently also applies the United States Treasury. Read more on this site for more information: http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2009/03/13/obamas-hiring-woes-to....

Oil Change International

This is a great organization--while they do work on the Climate Investment Funds, they focus primarily on the cozy connections between Congress and Big Oil.

They have an interactive database (www.followtheoilmoney.org) that's a terrific resource for anyone interested in hard numbers on which representatives accept how much in oil money and from whom--and then how that corresponds to their votes on energy and policy bills. What you'll find isn't surprising, but it is pretty interesting.

There's also another fun tool, an "oily dollar ATM" that, when you enter your zip code, displays a big dollar bill with the member's photo and how much money they've taken from the oil industry. The idea is that anyone can print them out and use them to raise awareness about just how much corruption there really is!