IDB criticized for some energy projects | Amazon Watch
Amazon Watch

IDB criticized for some energy projects

April 5, 2008 | By Jane Bussey and Jim Wyss | Miami Herald

Inter-American Development Bank President Luis Alberto Moreno touted the lending agency’s efforts to support green fuels and energy conservation on Saturday. But environmental groups accused the bank of pumping billions of dollars into projects that harm the environment.

During a series of seminars on climate change, renewable energy and biofuels during the IDB’s annual meeting at the Miami Beach Convention Center, Moreno outlined the bank’s energy and climate change efforts, including the Sustainable Energy and Climate Change Initiative launched a year ago.

“[It is] the focus of the IDB’s efforts to respond to these key challenges of our age and assist our partner countries in dealing effectively with the issues they raise,” Moreno said during the second day of the meeting, which is expected to draw 6,000 finance officials, business executives, bankers and members of nongovernmental organizations from the region.

But the Amazon Watch, Friends of the Earth and the Bank Information Center, which ar participating in the annual meeting, questioned the bank’s support for highway and energy projects under the auspices of the Integration of South American Regional Infrastructure. They said the project will contribute to deforestation, harm for indigenous communities and an increase in greenhouse gas emissions.

In Peru, the bank has approved a $400 million loan to the Camisea gas project, which cuts through a biodiverse region of the Peruvian Amazon. In Colombia, the Sustainable Energy and Climate Change Initiative has announced it’s backing for the Cerrejon coal mine, which Friends of the Earth say is a highly polluting energy source.

“The policies of the Inter-American Development Bank cannot be double-faced,” said Silvia Molina, of Friends of the Earth in Bolivia.

At midday, about 20 demonstrators gathered outside the convention center and launched a balloon holding a banner that read: “Investing in Agrofuels is Dirty Business, ” a play on the organization’s initials IADB.

Jodie Van Horn from Rainforest Action Network in San Francisco said the IDB needs to quit pushing biofuel projects that are draining Latin America to feed U.S. consumption.

“We’re concerned about this mad rush into a false solution called agrofuels,” she said. Instead, the IDB should focus its efforts on truly renewable sources of energy and encouraging conservation, she said. “We want to see some real reforms.”

During seminars organized by the bank Saturday, experts pointed out that climate change threatens the region with extreme weather events, has driven farmers from land degraded by drought, and could threaten plants and animals with extinction as well as endanger the coral reefs in the Caribbean.

“There is no silver bullet, but we do have multiple actions” said Mario Molina, a Mexican who won the 1995 Nobel prize in chemistry. He proposed the IDB help organize a network in Latin America and the Caribbean to promote best practices in biofuels, renewable energy and energy conservation.

Kenrick Leslie, executive director of the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre in Belize, said the Caribbean region was particularly vulnerable. “The Caribbean is just barely coping with the current situation,” Leslie said.

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