Title: Equator Principles Large Group Discussion
1Equator Principles Large Group Discussion
- Professor Doug Cerf
- Donald Bren Graduate School of Environmental
Science and Management - Environmental Risk Management (ESM 286)
- Winter 2008
2Fundamental questionWhat problems are the
Equator Principles trying to solve?
3- How do you foster economic growth and increase
the quality of life without - damaging the environment,
- compromising the human rights of some or
- jeopardize cultural traditions?
- How do you avoid/manage risk (environmental,
social and political)?
4The Dilemma
- There has been an increase in economic
development as a result of increase in large
projects (500 million or more) in recent years - Large projects in developing nations where
environmental policies are either in their
infancy or ignored by government authorities are
particularly susceptible to causing environmental
or social harm (creating environmental risk)
5ExampleChad-Cameroon Pipeline Project
- Economic growth to the west coast of Africa
- Threatened the areas fragile ecosystem
- Forced relocation of a number of the areas
indigenous people - Case for next time
6Equity in benefits and costs
- There is asymmetric distribution of the benefits
and costs when environmental and/or social
degradation occurs form a large project - Costs accrue to the host country and local
citizens - Benefits accrue to the project sponsors and
financers - It is difficult to quantify the costs related to
environmental and social degradation - Sponsors may pay to minimize the environmental
and social costs and risks - Sponsors may benefit from managing the
disruption
7Which parties should bear the environmental and
social risks?
- Theory risk should be allocated to parties that
best able to control the risks. - Possibilities
- Host government
- Project sponsors
- Lenders
8Which parties are best able to control
environmental and social risk?
- The sponsors (e.g. construction contractors) are
best able to control the risk because they have
the power to eliminate or remove the risk - Short term risk
- Example peoples livelihoods as a result of
being displaced - Long term risk
- Example air pollution from the project facility
9Sponsors motivation to mitigate the environmental
and social risk
- They are not charged for the degradation
therefore have little economic incentive to take
action - They are particularly concerned if the
environmental damage will delay successful
completion or operation of the project - This is different than for firms that are in it
for the long term - Example air pollution for a firm owned refinery
versus air pollution from a project finance new
power generation facility where the sponsor
leaves after the project is on-line
10Are private banks responsible for sustainable
development?
- Banks in question are private banks that
participate in project finance. - Do these banks through their lending practices
contribute to environmental and social
degradation? - Analogy Banks have responsibility under the
superfund law
11Private banks involvement in large projects
- Banks provide
- financial advisory services to project sponsors
- help arrange project financing
- provide portion of project debt
- Unlike the project sponsor banks do not play a
role in conceiving, promoting or managing the
large project - Banks have an incentive for projects to be
successful because some fees are dependent on
successful completion - Banks fees are dependent on timely completion
12Private bank risk
- Banks consider environmental and social risk as
credit risk because the degradation could lead to
project interruption which could impact
collection of interest and fees - Banks consider environmental and social risk as
reputation risk because of the risk of being
involved in harmful project. - Can impact banks other lines of business such as
consumer lines
13Private bank responsibility
- Should banks be held accountable for sustainable
development given sponsors have few incentives to
promote sustainable development? - Possibilities.
- Fully responsible (i.e. retroactive, joint and
several liability similar to superfund law) - Somewhat responsible because they were party to
the deal. - Not responsible
- Students should vote and provide justification
14Non government Organizations
- A non-governmental organization (NGO) is a
non-profit group or association that acts outside
of institutionalized political structures and
pursues matters of interest to its members by
lobbying, persuasion, or direct action. The term
is generally restricted to social, cultural,
legal, and environmental advocacy groups having
goals that are primarily noncommercial. - There are 29,000 international NGOs
- The US and India each have approximately 2
million NGOs
15The World Bank
- The World Bank Group is a group of five
international organizations responsible for
providing finance and advice to countries for the
purposes of economic development and poverty
reduction, and for encouraging and safeguarding
international investment.
16The NGO impact on large projects
- The likelihood that projects financed by private
commercial banks will go bad has increased in
recent years because of the actions and the
growing sophistication of NGOs. - The World Bank has sustainable development
mandates - Private banks involved in large projects did not
have sustainable development guidelines
17Will Equator Principles help solve the problem of
environmental degradation?
- Theoretically, if the principles promote
sustainable development, the NGOs will cease
their attacks - Concerns about Equator Principles include, scope,
implementation, enforcement - Student vote Do you think equator principles
will help promote sustainable development? - If not, why not.
18Equator principle issues
- Narrow scope
- Impact a small percentage of the projects
- Principles apply only to project finance loans
5-10 of total capital expenditures - Remainder uses corporate finance
- Does not apply to project bonds 10-20 of
projects - Only applies to projects of 50 million or
more14 between 1997 and 2002 were below 50
million - NGOs do not approve of the coverage of human
rights - There arent any no-go zones (location where
projects are forbidden)
19Equator principle issues
- Inconsistent implementation
- No industry wide implementation guidelines so
banks must develop their own internal guidelines - Limited enforcement mechanisms
- Voluntary compliance program
- Have voluntary compliance programs worked in the
past? - Degree of transparency is limited
- Without explicit reporting requirements
stakeholders will not know if banks are
implementing the principles or how effective they
are - Free rider problem of banks that adopt the
principles but do not implement them (fully)
20Equator principle issues
- Equator banks claim that principles would not
dramatically change the approach to environmental
and socially risky projects - They already have internal policies for this
purpose - Are these best practices principles or a least
common denominator principles?
21Reasons why Equator Principles will work
- Represents a major step in the right direction
- Adequate scope
- Increase in the use of project finance
- About half of all projects over 500 million used
project finance - Project finance investments have reached 132
billion in 2002 - The 10 original equator banks arranged 31 of all
the project finance loans in 2002 - Principles will affect 100 billion in global
investment over the next 10 years
22Reasons why Equator Principles will work
- Implementation flexibility
- Principle establish a common baseline
- Banks can implement internal policies that are
superior to the equator principles - Banks can determine the policies that work in
their organization - Flexibility should benefit implementation
23Reasons why Equator Principles will work
- Adequate enforcement
- Free riders will not impact the benefits of
participating banks - Risk reduction measures will be part of the loan
covenants and therefore will be enforceable on
the sponsors
24What should the banks do next?
- Marketing--Existing equator banks recruit non
equator banks - At some point if there are enough banks involved
the principles become an industry standard (one
the original objectives) - Should they target lead arranging banks
- Four of the top lead arranging banks have not
adopted - Should they target banks in other areas of the
world besides US, Europe and Australia where the
originating banks reside?
25If you were a project finance banker and received
a call would you adopt the principles?
- Reasons to adopt the principles
- Prevent project interruptions and derailments due
to NGO opposition - Minimizing environmental risk leads to
minimization of credit risk - Cooperation minimizes reputation risk
- Even if the bank already has internal principles
equivalent or superior to equator principles
there may be reputation benefits by being
associated with Equator Principles - Required by some development banks that require
similar principles
26If you were a project finance banker and received
a call would you adopt the principles?
- Reasons not to adopt the principles
- If you are not a bank that is being scrutinized
by the NGOs adopting the equator principles may
bring attention to you and result in a negative
reputation impact - Original banks suffered from negative reputation
impact from the NGO spotlight - Competitive advantage because non participating
banks will put less requirements on the project
sponsors (borrowers) - Why adopt the policies if they are flawed.
- Difficult to compete with regional banks in parts
of the world where lenders are not equator banks
(Asia, Latin America, Middle East)
27Should equator banks work on implementation?
- This strategy will buy the banks some time from
NGO criticism - Engage NGO during the implementation process
- This comes with the risk that the NGOs will want
too much - NGOs will have difficulty being critical of a
implementation process they are involved in - How do they select the NGO(s) to engage?
28Case Questions
- What problems are banks trying to solve by
adopting the Equator Principles? How do banks
contribute to this problem? Will the Principles
solve the problem? - Why are the NGOs criticizing the Equator
Principles? Is their criticism valid? - What should the Equator banks do now marketing
(encouraging other banks and ECAs to adopt the
principles), implementation (develop policies and
procedures), or damage control (respond to the
NGO criticism)?
29Case Questions
- If you were a banker would you adopt the Equator
principles? - How will history judge the actions taken by the
Equator bankers? Will the Equator Principles be
seen as a bold step towards achieving sustainable
development, a negligible step with long term
impact, or simply a public relations stunt?