ShellNews.net: This
is an informative report that we missed when
first published)
Published July 21,
2005
Shell Doubles Cost
Projections of Sakhalin II, Project Critics
Redouble Opposition
by William Baue
The
largest oil and gas project in the world
meets resistance over concerns about its
social and environmental impacts, as well as
its economic sustainability.
Last year, Shell (ticker:
RD) rocked the business world when it
revised its proven oil reserves by 20
percent, later revealing that top executives
had foreknowledge of mistakes in reserve
statements. Last week, Shell again sent out
shock waves when it revised cost projections
twofold for its
Sakhalin II project, upping estimations
from $10 billion to "the order of $20
billion" while simultaneously announcing
delays to the project timeline. Sakhalin II
is an oil and gas extraction project taking
place off of the east coast of Russia that
is already producing oil. Liquefied natural
gas (LNG) deliveries will begin in the
summer of 2008, and drilling will continue
through 2014.
Is there a connection between these
two revisions? According to Shell
spokesperson Susan Shannon, the answer is
no.
"They are completely different issues,
there's no link whatsoever," Ms. Shannon
told SocialFunds.com. "One is costs, the
other--which is now very much behind us--is
reserve categorization."
Ilyse Hogue, global finance campaigner for
Rainforest Action Network (RAN),
an environmental nongovernmental
organization (NGO) campaigning against the
Sahkalin II project, does see a connection,
albeit not a cause-and-effect relationship.
"Shell is doing a very poor job on both
internal governance and managing their own
affairs, and communicating to their
stakeholders and shareholders," Ms. Hogue
told SocialFunds.com. "Sahkalin II is the
largest oil and gas project ever on the
books with the most potential for social and
environmental damage we've ever seen, and
Shell is saying we should trust them, but
increasing evidence demonstrates exactly the
opposite conclusion--that they can't be
trusted."
"If you're a corporate or institutional
investor, such as those Shell is looking to
for project finance, investing in this
project is too big a risk economically,
environmentally, and socially," Ms. Hogue
added.
RAN noted that two European socially
responsible investment (SRI) funds--Investec
Henderson Crosthwaite and
Morley Fund--have divested from Shell
due to concerns over Sakhalin II.
RAN has joined together with other NGOs,
including Friends of the Earth (FoE),
World Wildlife Fund (WWF),
and
BankTrack, to
campaign against the project. The groups
are shining the spotlight on banks that have
signed the Equator Principles (EPs),
a set of voluntary social and environmental
guidelines covering project finance over $50
million.
BankTrack, a
network of fourteen NGOs operating as a
watchdog over social and environmental
impacts of financial institutions, issued a
report in April 2005 outlining the ways
Sakhalin II contravenes the EPs. For
example, clause 3 and Exhibit II of the EPs
require compliance with the International
Finance Corporation (IFC)
Safeguard Policy on Indigenous Peoples.
BankTrack, as well as local indigenous
peoples groups, claim that the Sakhalin II
project does not comply with this policy.
"The lack of access to full and truthful
information about the oil development and
the disinformation in published project
information, along with the lack of interest
by the company to carry out a serious
dialogue with native peoples' organizations,
has forced us to conduct civil protests,"
said Pavel Sulyandziga, vice president of
the Russian Association of Indigenous
Peoples of the North (RAIPON).
Ms. Shannon disagrees, pointing to Shell's
engagement with local indigenous communities
and company disclosures.
"We do listen to local concerns--for
example, there's quarterly community town
hall sessions, a new bypass road around the
site where the liquefied natural gas plant
will be opened, and the company has
supported over $2 million in community
programs including an HIV/AIDS education
program for youth and a traffic safety
initiative," Ms. Shannon said. "And we are
transparent--we recently commissioned an
independent scientific review by the IUCN,
and obviously their report was public."
"That was something very new--asking an
independent scientific review to look at
some issues--there were a number of
scientists who said that this was really
groundbreaking, and they praised us for
undertaking it," she added.
However, the
report by the International Scientific
Review Panel of the World Conservation Union
(IUCN),
which focused on the project's impact on the
endangered Western Gray Whales, recommended
against pursuing the project.
"[T]he most precautionary approach would be
to suspend present operations and delay
further development of the oil and gas
reserves in the vicinity of the gray whale
feeding grounds off Sakhalin . . . ," the
report states, though it also provides
guidance for going forward. "If for some
reason this is not deemed possible, risk
management needs to be conservative with
regard to western gray whales . . ."
Shell maintains that suspending present
operations is not possible.
"As a 55 percent shareholder in the Sakhalin
Energy Investment Company that actually runs
the project, Shell is obviously committed to
Sakhalin II," said Ms. Shannon.
The company also says it is conducting
appropriate risk management on the Sakhalin
II project, which exploits oil reserves in
the Piltun Astoskhskoye field off the
island.
"The Piltun-Astokhskoye platform, which is
seven kilometers away from the edge of the
Western Gray Whales feeding ground, has been
producing since 1999 and there has been no
discernible change in behavior in the
whales--we have monitored that closely, and
we're confident that our mitigating measures
can offset any potential impact," Ms.
Shannon said. "Furthermore, the route of the
Piltun-Astokhskoye pipeline that will bring
the oil and gas from the platform onto the
island has been changed to run outside the
whale feeding area."
The question remains whether such measures
will achieve their intended outcome.
"Although this [decision to re-route the
pipeline] is a welcome first step in
reducing the impacts on the whales, it is
not considered sufficient," states the
BankTrack report.
While the social and environmental risks of
the Sakhalin II are important considerations
for EP banks and non-EP banks alike,
financial risks may prove the make-or-break
considerations over whether to fund the
project, according to BankTrack founder
Michelle Chan-Fishel.
"There's no way you can tweak a $10 billion
finance package and all of the sudden have
your financiers be ready to pony up twice
that much," Ms. Chan-Fishel told
SocialFunds.com.
|