
Image: www.freefoto.com

Image: www.freefoto.com
Civil society groups have condemned Ex-Im Bank's reversal on Sasan. "The fix is in at Ex-Im Bank. The Bank's board bowed to political pressure and in so doing wastes public financing to worsen their fossil fuel binge" said Doug Norlen Policy Director for Pacific Environment. Like many large scale projects Sasan requires government backed financing to reduce the risk the private market refuses to take on. "The US government already lavishly subsidizes the coal industry with some $19 billion in tax breaks and other handouts," said Michelle Chan, Economic Policy Director for Friends of the Earth, which recently issued a subsidies report. "With this vote, Ex-Im Bank is choosing to dole out hundreds of millions more to dirty coal." The U.S. company set to profit from the deal, Bucyrus, took home hefty profits last year with $2.6 billion in revenue; and despite its jobs rhetoric, the company's 10-K states that it "recently finalized a joint venture with a local partner to expand our manufacturing capacity in China."
However, the support of Sasan is not an isolated incident. According to a recently released Government Accountability Office (GAO) report, more than 95% of Ex-Im's energy portfolio is based on fossil fuels, and in 2009 Ex-Im Bank financing for renewable energy was less than 0.5% of the agency's total financing. Yet, according to a recent study by the World Wildlife Fund, for every million dollars invested in energy projects, 13.5 jobs are created in the clean tech export sector, while only 3.7 and 4.9 jobs are created in the oil, gas and coal industries, respectively. "Addressing climate change by developing and exporting tomorrow's clean energy technologies strengthens the US economy. Continuing to finance outdated technologies that destroy our environment also destroys our chances for clean energy job creation. It only serves to cripple our competitiveness in the long run" said John Coequyt - Director of International Programs at the Sierra Club.
The agency is now turning its sights on an even larger and more destructive project, the Kusile coal fired power project in South Africa. The 4,800 MW project would be responsible for 36.8 million tons of carbon dioxide annually and would increase South African energy sector emissions by 12.8% and the country's total contribution to climate change by 9.7%.
UScitizens have already submitted nearly 7,500 public comments in opposition to the US government's contribution to this dirty project and its environmental impacts. The US Ex-Im Bank Board is expected to take up a due diligence vote on Kusile in early September. With the agency's reversal on Sasan, and the sheer scale of the Kusile project in the pipeline, it is likely to be a pitched battle. "These public financing decisions will literally determine our future. We can either help lead the world in a clean energy economy, or deepen the climate change crisis we are already in," said Norlen.
Source: Friends of the Earth, Image: Freefoto.com
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