NEWS
April 17, 2009

RWI Legal Analyst Addresses World Bank EI Week

From March 3-5, the World Bank Oil, Gas, and Mining Policy Division sponsored an Extractive Industries Week conference on the topic of "Improving EI Benefits for the Poor," taking on the topic of changing dynamics in the extractive sectors in the face of volatile commodity prices.

Panel topics included forming an integrated approach to extractive industries management, the donor perspective on EITI progress, an exhibit of images from Ed Kashi's book, Curse of the Black Gold—a photojournalistic account of the Niger Delta's extractive sector—and emerging players in the oil, gas, and mining sectors. Attendees included World Bank and International Monetary Fund officials, policymakers from the EU and other countries, nonprofit and civil society representatives, social scientists and academics, economists, lawyers, extractive industry consultants, and others.

RWI legal analyst Matthew Genasci spoke, with World Bank Lead Energy Economist Silvana Tordo and Cesar Polo, the Former Vice Minister of Mines in Peru, on a panel about the Negotiation of Mining and Oil Legal Agreements. Explaining RWI's multifaceted "value chain" approach to improving resource management, Genasci argued that a comprehensive approach to reform that addresses production and revenue generation through expenditures and development should be undertaken with a dual goal in mind: to help citizens receive better benefits from their governments, and, supporting this objective, to help governments reap better revenues from resource companies working in their countries. Effective contract negotiation—a key focus of Revenue Watch's work in Africa and around the world—is crucial to achieving both objectives.

"Most resource-dependent countries cannot afford for the guiding objectives to be simply project specific, or even focused on something as narrow as mineral sector development," said Genasci. "Rather, the overall development strategy for the country should be driving the negotiation and determining the objectives for the sector. Embedding contract negotiations into the overarching development strategy is crucial to ensuring that a country is getting a good deal and using its mineral wealth wisely."

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MEDIA FEED

EU Hits Back at Geithner on Regulation - Financial Times

DR Congo: Ex-Rebels Take Over Mineral Trade Extortion Racket - Global Witness

Nigerians Recount the Night of Their Bloody Revenge - The New York Times

Tanzania: Mining Exploitation Has Bright Future - Tanzania Daily News

Mexico Oil Politics Keeps Riches Just Out of Reach - The New York Times

PDAC 2010: Miners Face More Controls - Financial Post (Canada)

Tullow Says Profits Have Been Hit by Falling Oil Prices - BBC

Global Oil and Mining Transparency Initiative Arrives at Key Deadline - Publish What You Pay

Many Countries Failing to Implement Oil and Mining Industry Anti-Corruption Initiative - Oxfam International

Uganda: Pressure Mounts on Government Over Oil - The Monitor

West Africa: Ivory Coast "Battles" Ghana Over Oil - The Chronicle

Ugandan Donors Warn of Aid Cuts, Oil "Curse" - Voice of America News

Ghana: Battle Over Supremacy in Jubilee Field - The Chronicle

Energy Security in Europe: Central Questions - The Economist

IMF Urges Azerbaijan Government to Improve Transparency - Reuters UK

 

NEWS & INFORMATION ARCHIVES

2006, 2005

PUBLICATIONS

Contracts Confidential: Ending Secret Deals in the Extractive Industries
Contract transparency is sorely needed to improve the management of natural resource wealth. In a new report from RWI, authors Peter Rosenblum and Susan Maples delve into government and private sector objections to contract disclosure and make conclusions about what information may legitimately and reasonably be kept confidential, and how civil society institutions can better confront the challenge of secret deals.
Learn more about the report ...

Drilling Down
This milestone guide from the Revenue Watch Institute provides step-by-step explanations of each phase of EITI implementation and a comprehensive review of extractive industries accounting for civil society readers.
Learn more about Drilling Down ...