World Bank's Proposed Policy puts World's
Forests at Risk
World Rainforest Movement,
Forest Peoples Programme,
Environmental Defense
19 June 2002
In the run-up to Johannesburg where governments
from around the world will debate how to protect the global environment,
the World Bank has released its long awaited draft policy on forests.
Although called a safeguard policy, the world forests will not be
made safer by the adoption of this policy which flies in the face
of demands of civil society and ignores most of the advice given
to the Bank by its own Technical Advisory Group. In addition, it
fails to address the main causes of deforestation which the Bank's
own Operations Evaluation Department identified as being driven
by the powerful forces of globalization and economic liberalization,
as well by as by poor governance.
In a nutshell: the proposed policy relies
on market forces or marketing arrangements to address deforestation.
Large-scale timber export and carbon sequestration projects are
the likely beneficiaries. Yet there is no evidence to date that
these projects can be effective in promoting environmentally sound
and socially equitable development.
The proposed policy opens the doors to
Bank extractive investments in all types of forests except those
Bank bureaucrats deem to be critical forests. Participatory mechanisms
to ensure that the nearly one billion people world-wide whose livelihoods
depend on forests will have a say in the definition of critical
forests are not part of the plan. The only mention of participation
is where the proposed policy calls for the private sector as well
as local people and non-governmental-organization to provide input
into the establishment of timber certification systems, which are
to be based on the borrower country national laws and institutions.
Given the balance-of-power in many of the world's main forest countries
where governments and the logging companies operate in highly destructive
and non-equitable ways, a much stronger requirement for the rights
of affected people is called for.
Instead of proposing clear and strong new
safeguards to protect the world's forests, the proposed policy refers
to seven other existing World Bank 'Safeguard Policies' as a means
to ensuring the protection of ecosystems and forest-dependent people.
Ecosystems are to be protected under the Safeguard Policy for Natural
Habitats, yet this policy has been largely ineffective and has not
halted destructive investment projects. Local people's rights are
to be protected under the Indigenous Peoples' Policy, yet this policy
does not secure the tenure rights of indigenous forest peoples and
fully ignores the hundreds of millions of non-indigenous people
depending on forests for their survival.
The draft policy completely sidesteps the controversial issue of
the impacts on forests of programmatic and structural adjustment
lending by just passing this serious problem to a long-delayed,
forthcoming revision of the Bank's overall policy on adjustment
lending.
The proposed policy represents a severe weakening
of the existing Operational Policy on Forests of 1993. Its planned
provisions are unacceptable because they lack proper safeguards
and pose a high risk to the forests and forest peoples who will
inevitably be harmed when Bank projects go wrong.
Among the more disappointing and disturbing
elements in the new draft policy are the following:
- Despite demands from all those consulted
that the policy should apply to the whole World Bank Group, the
draft policy does not apply to the Bank's private sector arms,
the International Finance Corporation (IFC) and the Multilateral
Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA).
- Despite public commitments from
Senior Bank Management, the draft policy does not apply to structural
adjustment or programmatic lending.
- Although the policy does apply
to the Bank's country level planning ('Country Assistance Strategies'
and 'Economic and Sector Work'), only vague assurances are made
that, where strategies are found to threaten forests or forest
dwellers, the impacts will be 'addressed': no details are given
of how the Bank will do this or what must be done by Borrowers
or clients to avoid such impacts.
- In response to fifteen years
demanding such by NGOs, the policy does appear to apply to all
Bank projects that may impact forests (and not just 'forestry'
projects). But, on further scrutiny, it turns out that no new
standards are set. The policy merely invokes the existing 'Natural
Habitats' policy, which it is widely admitted has not been protecting
forests adequately.
- Under the draft policy, Bank
projects may trash most forests. Even 'critical' forests can be
trashed, where alternative locations are not considered 'feasible'
and as long as undefined 'mitigatory measures' are proposed.
- The previous policy proscribed
World Bank funding of logging in primary moist tropical forests.
NGOs had demanded that this proscription be extended to cover
all old growth forests. Instead the Bank proposes it may now fund
logging in all types of forests except those it decides are 'critical'.
- The Bank's technical advisors
had recommended that the determination of what are critical forests
in any one country or area should be established through participation
with interested groups. Instead the draft gives authority to determine
these areas to Bank technocrats.
- The previous policy only permitted
the Bank to fund plantations on non-forested areas or heavily
degraded forest lands. The new draft policy allows plantations
to be established in forests, although it 'prefers' these not
be areas specially cleared for the plantation.
- Bank funding of commercial logging
will now be subject either to third party certification or an
action plan promising such. However, beyond a vague list of issues
to be addressed, the policy does not make clear what standards
of certification are acceptable to the Bank, thus opening the
way to rogue certifiers.
- The previous policy sought commitments
from Borrower countries to sustainable forest management and the
institutional and policy framework to achieve this. This requirement
has been dropped.
- In the 1993 policy, projects
to promote private sector forestry had to be accompanied by measures
to ensure the participation of civil society. The requirement
has been dropped.
- The previous policy required
Borrower commitments to reserve areas for conservation alongside
forest exploitation. The requirement has been dropped.
- The previous policy required
Borrower commitments to reserve areas for forest dwellers. NGOs
and the Bank's own technical advisors had urged the inclusion
of stronger provisions to protect the rights of indigenous peoples
and other forest dwellers. Instead these requirements have
been weakened.
- The previous policy noted that
the Bank does not finance projects that contravene applicable
international environment agreements. NGOs had recommended that
this provision should be strengthened to include applicable international
human rights agreements. Instead, the Bank has dropped this
requirement altogether.
- The Bank's technical advisors
had recommended that provisions be included to ensure that projects
would alleviate poverty. The Bank has ignored the advice.
- The advisors had likewise recommended
against including measures to promote markets in carbon trading
in the policy, as the inclusion of forests in these markets had
not yet been agreed among governments. The Bank has ignored this
advice too.
Apparently hoping that most NGOs and governments
will be too preoccupied with their preparations for the World Summit
on Sustainable Development to carefully assess the draft policy,
the Bank has offered only a six week aperture for comments on the
draft (comments must be submitted by 2 August 2002).
The WRM, FPP and ED are calling on the Bank and the Bank's executive
Directors to:
- Delay finalisation of the policy
until adequate time is given for debate and further inputs
- Rewrite the draft policy in
line with the technical advice and NGO recommendations made during
the Bank's public consultations on its Forest Policy Implementation
Review and Strategy (FPIRS)
Further information:
To view the new draft policy see:
http://wbln0018.worldbank.org/ESSD/essdext.nsf/14ByDocName/ForestPolicyandStrategy
For background information also see:
www.forestpeoples.org
http://www.wrm.org.uy/actors/WB/index.html
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