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Equator News Coverage

Environmental standards loom ever larger in banks' lending decisions, by Susanne Bergius, ENDS Report, December 2008
German | English

60 Second Profile on the Equator Principles, Good Practice Newsletter from ICMM, December 2008

Ecology Stamp on Project Finance, by Susanne Bergius, Handelsblatt, 16 July 2008 (in German)

Banks increase their environmental requirements

Promoting Greater Responsibility in Project Financing by Natasha Cappon, Canada, Spring, 2008

China to bring in green loan benchmark, 25 January, 2008

A Question of Principles, Infrastructure Magazine, by Kimberley Gaskin, June 2007

Citigroup to scale up its green spending,The Financial Times, 8 May 2007.

Leaders challenge 'business as usual', Guardian, 6 November 2006

Financial Sector Responsibility

Building a better world (for investors and whales), The Banker, 3 July 2006

Update on the Equator Principles - 2006 Revision, Allens Arthur Robinson, August 2006

The Miami Herald July 31, 2006.

Building sustainability into syndication, Project Finance - July/August 2006

For Citigroup, Greening Starts With Listening

For people and planet, San Francisco Chronicle, 4 April 2006

Conservation You Can Bank On (Christopher Wright) (PDF - 91k)

'A New Environment', Legal Week 2 February 2006 (Paul Watchman and Charles July of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer) (PDF - 2572k)

'Banks Business and Human Rights' (2006) 2 JIBFL 46 (Paul Watchman of Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer) (PDF - 59k)

Polluters Clean Up Act to Attract Lenders, The Moscow Times, 12 October 2005

The Equator Principles - guidelines for responsible project financing, Focus, Allens Arthur Robinson, August 2005 (PDF - 122k)

Corporate Green, Washington Post, 11 May 2005

Taking The Earth Into Account, Time Europe, 9 May 2005

Principles in Question, The Banker, March 2005 (PDF - 97k)

Banking on the future, Euromoney Syndicated Lending Handbook 2005, December 2004 (PDF - 38k)

A Matter of Principles, Global Finance, January 2005

Principle Finance, Euromoney, October 2004

Putting principles into practice, Environmental Finance, June 2004

'Greening' of financial sector gathering speed, Financial Times, 4 June 2004

"Equator - Risk and Sustainability," from Project Finance International, 2004 Yearbook. (PDF - 429k)

NGOs Bring Bank Scrutiny Back on Track, Ethical Corporation Online, 2 May 2004

Banks contest ban proposed for coal and oil extraction, Financial Times, 5 April 2004

A Matter of Principal, Project Finance, 3 March 2004

The Equator Principles: a milestone or just good PR?, Global Agenda, 26 January 2004

Mizuho To Adopt Environmental Standards In Project Financing, CNNfn, 26 October 2003

Dexia adhère aux "Equator principles", La Tribune, 22 September 2003 (in French)

Western Banks Set Standards for Eco-Friendly Lending. Japanese Banks Far Behind. NGO Keeping Close Watch, Nikkei, 5 September 2003

A point of principle, Global Finance, July 2003

Equator Principles — Why Indian Banks Too Should be Guided by Them, The Hindu, 25 July 2003

Project finance — Standards for Lending, Financial Mail, 25 July 2003

Financiers must meet criteria, Business Day, 14 July 2003

Banks agree new loan guidelines, Ethical Performance, July 2003

Principled finance?, Project Finance, June 2003 Cover Story

Banks club together to turn their notes green, The Age, 22 June 2003

Nikkei Financial Daily, 11 June 2003 (in Japanese - PDF)

Banks' green pledge earns mixed response, swissinfo, 10 June 2003

Greening the banks, The Economist, 7-13 June 2003

Leading banks sign up to project finance principles, Environmental Finance, 6 June 2003

Bancos adotam princípios de responsabilidade social, Valor Econômico, 5 June 2003 (in Portuguese)

Zehn Banken werden zu Umweltschützern, Die Tageszeitung, 5 June 2003 (in German)

Major Banks Endorse Equator Principles, The Peninsula, Qatar, 5 June 2003

The 'Equator Principles' adopted by leading banks, The Times of India, 5 June 2003

Westpac's principles, Australian Financial Review, 5 June 2003

Loan rules with an eye on nature, International Herald Tribune, 5 June 2003

10 global banks endorse socially responsible "Equator Principles", Agence France Presse, 5 June 2003

"THE FLIP SIDE", CNN, 4 June 2003 (transcript)

IFC Head's Remarks at Equator Principles Press Conference, 4 June 2003

Banks sign up for responsible lending accord, Financial Times, 4 June 2003

Banks Accept Environmental Rules, The Wall Street Journal, 4 June 2003

Banks in drive for project principles, Financial Times, 9 April 2003

Four banks adopt IFC agreement, Financial Times, 7 April 2003

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Putting principles into practice

Principle Finance, Euromoney, October 2004

The signatories to Equator have taken a lot of flak, at worst being accused of a cynical PR exercise. But if there is no obvious change, is more change needed or is the Equator effect in banking practice detail? Michel Anastassiades, global head of project finance and Eric Cochard, in charge of implementation at Calyon give one Equator bank's perspective.

“Being among the initial banks to adopt the Principles was self-evident for our department as this initiative meets the Credit Agricole Group's values and Calyon's practice in project finance.

“Project finance lending requires comprehensive due diligence, involves long maturities and seeks a community of interest among stakeholders. Environmental and social aspects were already regarded as crucial factors of risk and given proper consideration within Calyon's credit process.

“Moreover, we were seeing a growing commitment from our clients to sustainable development and many of them had already reached a very sophisticated level regarding these aspects. What was lacking was a common language among stakeholders. The World Bank and IFC guidelines offered the well-respected, reasonably neutral and immediately available benchmark that was needed.

“As anticipated this initiative has been generally well perceived by our clients and sponsors as the Principles establish a clear and consistent level of requirements as well as saving time by doing it right the first time.”

Implementation and findings
“Implementation is a key issue. Banks adhering to the principles must categorise projects as A, B or C (indicating high, medium or low environmental and social risks) on the basis of the IFC's environmental and social screening process and express requirements consistent with the outcome of the categorisation process.

“Banks include covenants in the loan documentation and request regular reports by the project company on compliance. In case of non-compliance, banks would encourage the borrower in its efforts to return to compliance and may eventually default the loans if no proper corrective action is taken.

“Banks have also committed to implement the Equator Principles in a timely and efficient manner. At Calyon the Principles have been integrated into the existing credit process. More importantly, Calyon has heavily invested in people through an extensive training scheme involving the IFC that has already trained 120 individuals world-wide. Of these, around 50% are front office staff and 50% are people indirectly involved (credit department, in-house consultants, middle office).

“While the objectives and content of training are consistent, its format is adapted to the culture prevailing in the various project finance units world-wide and to the people concerned. In addition, and as an opportunity to increase practice and progress more quickly on the learning curve, we have undertaken a full review of our current portfolio.

“We have rapidly switched from a screening process where industrial sector and scale of project were determining the intrinsic rating of projects to one that privileges the sensitivity of the location and the extent of the potential environmental and social impacts of the project. Applying such a screening process to a large and significant sample of projects has resulted in the following breakdown into the A, B and C categories:

Projects rated:
Category A Category B Category C
Between 5 and 10% Around 80% Almost 10%


“As a second step, we assess the capacity of the sponsors to deal with the environmental and social impacts that have been identified.

“And finally, as a third step, we determine our requirements in terms of completeness of the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA), review of such EIA by independent consultants, Environmental Management Plan and public consultation.

“For projects rated B, the level of the requirements imposed depends directly upon the combination of the nature of the potential impacts identified and the categorisation of the sponsors. Assessment of sponsors' capability is thus a key step in our due diligence process as most projects belong to the B category.

“While the Equator Principles were mainly consistent with our values and existing practice, we have found that formalising the daily practice through these principles has created a virtuous circle. While assessing the sensitivity of a location can be regarded as straightforward, we have recorded a fairly significant improvement in the accuracy of the assessment of the potential environmental impacts as a result of training and usage.

“To a large extent, we can say that we have increased our professionalism and in so doing the management of the reputation risk for all stakeholders. We are convinced that the ability to manage these issues will be more and more a key factor of success for project financing. As a direct result, Calyon has been developing a real capacity to help its clients to also assess and manage, in an efficient manner, market requirements.”

Challenges ahead for Equator banks
“The last months have been brisk with the release of the controversial Extractive Industries Report and the launch by the IFC of its consultation process regarding the revision of its safeguard policies. We have given careful consideration to both as they will determine best practices for the next few years.

“In our answer to the Extractive Industries Report, signed together with 10 other banks, we have emphasised the crucial role of the World Bank Group in ensuring sound environmental and social practices. Should the IFC withdraw from the financing of extractive industries projects either due to a ban on coal and oil extraction or as a result of setting well intentioned but unfortunately unrealistic preconditions, we believe that this could lead countries that are most in need of development assistance to face a cruel choice. Either to remain mired in poverty or find less desirable paths to develop their extractive potential.

“Our intention, somehow misinterpreted, wasn't of course to support or blame any specific energy policy, for which banks have no mandate. It was merely to outline the most efficient way to address concerns expressed in the Extractive Industries Report. Moreover, we share the conclusions on key issues including improved governance, adequate mitigation of adverse impacts, preservation of health and safety and need for an equitable sharing of value.

“In addition, having 11 Equator banks sign the same letter doesn't mean that Equator banks act as an organised group. There is presently no intention to have a secretariat representing Equator banks as this would raise a major legitimacy issue. Individual banks have no mandate to speak for other financial institutions.

“Each Equator bank has its own culture, its own environmental and social policy and its own model to implement the Principles. At Calyon, we work in close connection with the Sustainable Development Group at our parent company, Credit Agricole SA, on all these matters. Banks do exchange information on best practice and the variety of implementation models adopted is beneficial in this respect – we learn much from each other.”

Potential evolution of IFC safeguards
“Regarding the revision of IFC policies, we appreciate the efforts by IFC to recognise the respective objectives and responsibilities of the various stakeholders but we regard the existing policies as already fairly satisfactory.

“In our opinion, the main challenge to improving these policies rests on including flexibility in order to better adapt requirements to each particular circumstance while limiting the risk for interpretation. In order to remain a market standard and favour consistency among all parties, the new policies should remain predictable and determine clearly what is requested in any specific situation. To enhance efficiency, they should also be easily understandable, realistic and manageable at the project level for all parties concerned.

“Achieving these goals is not easy, but several levels of text might be part of the answer. In any case, we believe that the input of clients will be essential to ensure an efficient process.”

Limited leverage of Equator banks
“Another important step was the meeting held on July 1 among Equator banks and NGOs to exchange views on implementation of the Equator Principles. Subsequently, a working group in which Calyon is a participant has been set up in order to make suggestions to better address concerns expressed by some NGOs. It will also be crucial to have the clients involved in this process as they are the key stakeholders on whom most of the constraints ultimately impact. The suggestions are due to be presented at the next general meeting to be held in February 2005.

“In our opinion, a basic question implicit in all these forums is: “What influence can we have as a banker on the environmental and social footprint of a project?” As already said, banks have no legitimacy to define industrial policies and we certainly have no intention to supersede Governments, citizens or NGOs. Neither are commercial banks development bodies with a social mandate. As commercial banks, we are private companies that report to their shareholders.

“However, as Equator banks, we are clearly and fully committed to enhance sound environmental and social practice as well as to seek sound project economics and a fair return for our own shareholders. We therefore contribute to sustainable development in the framework of the projects we finance. While we believe that banks can exercise a clear influence until funds are disbursed, we are more sceptical regarding the influence they may have thereafter.

“Monitoring is a difficult task, in particular for social matters, and banks will have ultimately to rely on the project company. In theory, banks might exercise a right of step in, triggered by certain circumstances but even in such a situation, the power of banks should not be over estimated. Often, local laws, such as Chapter 11 or receivership, limit significantly what banks are entitled to do.

“And in any case, any right of action of banks will not be a straightforward process. Local employment, pollution and rights of the various parties may lead to a serious conflict of interests, the arbitration of which may be difficult to predict. These limitations are one of the reasons that led us to put significant emphasis on the capability of the sponsors during our screening process.

“Furthermore, at Calyon, we attach a lot of importance to our ability to deliver. We strongly believe that the framework needed to achieve the level of environmental and social performance sought for a specific project should be determined before disbursement of the loan. This is a question of predictability and we believe that it will be beneficial for all stakeholders.

“Have the Equator Principles changed anything? When 28 of the most active banks in project financing reject environmental and social neglect on the projects they finance, meet regularly to debate best practice and engage in consultation processes with all stakeholders – something has changed dramatically and positively in banking practice.”

© 2004 Euromoney Institutional Investor PLC.

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Institutions Which Have Adopted the Equator Principles

Absa Bank Limited
Access Bank
ANZ
Arab African International Bank
ASN Bank NV
Banco Bradesco
Banco de la República Oriental del Uruguay
Banco do Brasil
Banco Galicia
Banco Santander
Bancolombia S.A.
BankMuscat
Bank of America
Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ
Barclays plc
BBVA
BES Group
BMO Financial Group
BNP Paribas
Caixa Econômica Federal
Caja Navarra
Calyon
CIBC
CIFI
Citigroup Inc.
CORPBANCA
Credit Suisse Group
Dexia Group
DnB Nor
E+Co
EFIC
EKF
Export Development Canada
FirstRand Bank Ltd
FMO
Fortis Bank Nederland
Fortis Bank NV/SA
HBOS
HSBC Group
HypoVereinsbank
Industrial Bank Co., Ltd
ING Group
Intesa Sanpaolo
Itau Unibanco S/A
JPMorgan Chase
KBC
KfW IPEX-Bank
la Caixa
Lloyds TSB
Manulife
Mizuho Corporate Bank
Millennium bcp
National Australia Bank
Nordea
Nedbank Group
Rabobank Group
RBC
Scotiabank
SEB
Societe Generale
Standard Bank Group
Standard Chartered Bank
SMBC
TD Bank Financial Group
The Royal Bank of Scotland
Wells Fargo & Company
WestLB AG
Westpac Banking Corporation

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