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The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative – why transparency matters to all Jonas Moberg Tokyo 26 January 2010 www.eiti.org
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Moberg Tokyo Jan 2010ii

May 09, 2015

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Jonas Moberg, Tokyo 2010
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Page 1: Moberg Tokyo Jan 2010ii

The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative – why transparency matters to all

Jonas MobergTokyo 26 January 2010

www.eiti.org

Page 2: Moberg Tokyo Jan 2010ii

www.eiti.org

Governance failure Pressure/attention

Investigative reporting

Facilitation

Business case for action Negotiation

Implementation

Quality Assurance

Code/standard

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1997

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December 1999

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Petrol is the best vector of corruption

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Africa's Oil DreamsTHURSDAY, MAY. 31, 2007 By ALEX PERRY

Petrol sellers in Lagos, Nigeria.

www.eitransparency.org

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Chart of original media articles mentioning “Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative” from 1 Jan 2008 – 31 Dec 2009:

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Dr Peter Eigen, Chairman of the EITI, interviewed by Jonathan Charles on the BBC news programme HARDtalk, November 6, 2009.

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www.eiti.org

Governance failure Pressure/attention

Investigative reporting

Facilitation

Business case for action Negotiation

Implementation

Quality Assurance

Code/standard

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Award of licenses

&contracts

Regulation&

monitoring of operations

The EITI provides a Forum for dialogue and a Platform for broader reforms

Revenuedistribution

& management

Implementation of sustainable development policies

Government Spending

Companies Disclose

Payments

Government Discloses Receipt

of Payments

Independent Verification of Tax & Royalty

PaymentsEITI Report”

Oversight by aMulti-Stakeholder

Group

How the EITI works

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o 30 Implementing Countries across Africa, Asia, Latin America, Middle East and Central Asia

o 45 major international oil, gas, and mining companies

o 80 institutional investors with collective assets of over $16 trillion

o 100s of civil society groups and networks – e.g. Publish What You Pay, Open Society/Revenue Watch Institute, Transparency International

o Supporting Countries, including Japan, Australia, Canada, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, the UK and the US

EITI in 2010

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EITI Implementing countries30 countries

Supporting countries and organisationsincluding the World Bank, AfDB and ADB

Civil society organisationshundreds, often through Publish What You Pay

Supporting institutional investors

16trillion US in Management

Supporting companies45, including most of the world’s largest

EITI International Secretariat

Oslo

The EITI Board

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EITI International Secretariat

EITI Implementing countries

Activities of supporting companies:

Companies operating in EITI implementing countries:

• Participation in EITI reporting

• Participating in implementation

• Financial support to EITI International Secretariat

• Participates in the governance of the EITI, through eg the Board

Non-operators:

• Global political support

• Financial support to EITI International Secretariat

There is no added reporting requirement for companies that support the EITI.

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EITI

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Implementing Countries

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Norway published its 1st Report on Jan 21, 2010

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Norway’s report is disaggregated

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Lessons to be shared

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Why governments implement the EITI

-Enlightened self-interestTo prevent corruptionTo build trust amongst communitiesTo attract foreign direct investmentTo attract leading companies To gain international recognitionTo improve credit rating

- Encouragement from the international community Development community promoting good governanceIMF and others wishing to see improved fiscal managementEnergy security through transparency

- Encouragement from industryLicense to operateLong-term investment depends on a sound business

climate

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Ellen Johnson SirleafPresident of Liberia

“The Liberia EITI is one of the institutional pillars of integrity anchoring and sustaining the reform agenda of Liberia.”“By promoting better management and use of public resources and discouraging corruption, LEITI … is critical to poverty reduction and social development in Liberia.”

July 2009, when signing the new LEITI law

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Why companies implement the EITI

- Contribute towards a sound business climate- Investors and employees - Limit possible involvement in corruption- Reputational risk mitigation- Please hosting government- Build trust with local communities- low cost

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EITI

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EITI Implementation Guides

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EITI Other Publications

...and video.

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The EITI has been politically endorsed by many Governments and in many forums

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The AU, EU, UN, G8, G20,..

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• It can be a platform for long-term reform• From transparency to accountability • To fight corruption maybe• To build trust and confidence

- definetely

Lessons

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• Depth – implementation quality• Width – continued progress with large

emerging economies

Looking ahead

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www.eiti.org

Jonas Moberg

Head of the EITI Secretariat

[email protected]