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Equator News Coverage

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

Contact

Contact for information about the Equator Principles
A point of principle

Ten global banking giants have taken a bold step toward ensuring projects they finance around the world meet strict environmental and social criteria. The impact of this move could be dramatic.

GLOBAL FINANCE MAGAZINE, July 2003
By Bo Glasgow

Early last month 10 of the world's leading project finance banks adopted the Equator Principles, a set of voluntary environmental and social guidelines covering investments in major projects. Modeled on the International Finance Corporation's and the World Bank's environmental and social guidelines and policies, the Equator Principles (EP) require environmental management plans (EMPs) for sensitive projects to ensure that they protect natural habitats and the rights of indigenous peoples and provide safeguards against child and forced labor.

Praise for the move has come from both commercial and watchdog organizations, with some remarking that the Equator Principles represent something the export credit agencies, hampered by a diverse set of political allegiances, have so far failed to accomplish.

"The adopting banks are doing something that financial institutions rarely do," says Peter Woicke, International Finance Corporation's executive vice president--the IFC is part of the World Bank Group--who helped facilitate the process that led to Equator. "They are stepping forward in a leadership role on global environmental and social issues." The potential effect of EP is great. "Even if you use an extremely conservative estimate," he says, "this adoption will change the rules of the road for over $100 billion in global investment over the next 10 years." The principles will apply across all industry sectors for project finance loans of $50 million or more.

Last year alone the 10 adopting institutions underwrote $14.5 billion of project loans, representing about 30% of the project loan syndication market globally. Citigroup, ABN AMRO, Barclays and West LB together comprised the drafting team. The other banks giving first voice to the Equator Principles are Crédit Lyonnais, Credit Suisse First Boston, HVB Group, Rabobank Group, The Royal Bank of Scotland and Westpac Banking Corporation. The founding members anticipate that another six to 10 financial institutions are close to joining their group. Last year banks did some $48 billion in project loans, the IFC chipped in with around $2.5 billion, and the export credit agencies contributed between $5 billion and $10 billion.

Targeting the business, not environmental, side of the banks was crucial. "With ABN AMRO playing host, heads of project finance and risk management were invited to London last October," says Suellen Lazarus, an IFC director. "These are the people making the core business decisions, who have to deal with the economic or NGO fallout in the event a problem child surfaces." In participants' minds the primary motivating factor for banding together is, says Lazarus, to level the playing field. Presenting a united front is an antidote to the likely tendency that sponsors with sensitive projects would gravitate to institutions with lax standards. Adopting the Equator Principles also makes sound business sense for the banks involved. "Banks face both credit and reputation risk when they finance development around the world," says Citigroup's global head of project finance, Chris Beale, who played a pivotal role in achieving the EP declaration. "If sponsors adopt and follow EP for sensitive projects," he says, "they might well enjoy a faster implementation period, with the end result being that the project starts generating a revenue stream earlier, avoiding the specter of costly interruptions, delays and retrenchments." The belief is, he says, that "Equator will lead to more secure investments on the part of our customers and safer loans on the part of the banks."

The downside to not paying heed to EP concerns could be dire, Beale implies. If banks finance something dirty or that harms people, it's possible the host government or local people will interfere with or even confiscate the private development project. "Environmental risk is business risk; it's as simple as that," says Bernd Schanzenbacher, Credit Suisse Group's head of environmental issues.

Environmental groups, while welcoming the initiative, are reserving judgment. "EP is something that potentially can be very significant," says Michelle Chan-Fishel, Friends of the Earth green investments project program manager. "We do welcome it when banks have the guts to go on the record – but the proof is in the implementation pudding."

Project Finance A,B,C
The first step in the process is to categorize projects A, B or C, with "A" projects having the highest risk for impact and the greatest need for mitigation and "C" projects being merely financial transactions. The "A" projects will require the most careful EMPs. Lead arrangers to the deal will have to negotiate differences of opinion where they arise. But as Paul Mudde, ABN AMRO's head of reputation management and sustainable development, says, "The arranger group will determine the deal's conditions, and the other participants will follow its lead." Citigroup's Beale adds, "It's the impact of the project that counts, not the project itself. A pipeline through a forest is likely to be an 'A'. The same pipeline being built in an industrialized area would be a 'B'." The Equator Principles apply only to direct project finance loans and not to corporate deals, says Beale, "because in a corporate deal banks don't have the market power to impose covenants." Corporate loans are usually undefined for general corporate purposes. They're made on the good faith and credit of the corporation, eschewing specific covenants. It's through the covenant vehicle that EP shows its teeth. "Even in the case where a particular plant, financed by a 'corporate' loan, lost its operating permit," he says, "defaulting the loan might set in motion unwarranted repercussions to the total credit of the corporation. It could in effect bring the whole house down." Allocating responsibility between lenders and sponsors ends in a split decision. Banks set the process in motion by building into the language of covenants what is required of the sponsor. It's then up to the sponsor to live up to the terms of his contract. "If they don't comply," says Beale, "banks could default on the loan, which in turn could stop construction draw downs or cause the loan, if the project is in operation, to be accelerated." In the EP preamble it states that sponsors who are unwilling or unable to comply with EP policies are not eligible. The whole process of developing the EPM involves a third-party consultant and public review by all the stakeholders. The prevention-versus-mitigation debate highlights contrasting perspectives between NGOs, which stress the need for "no-go" zones, and banks, which focus on economic development, urging clients to develop plans to mitigate the impact. Individually, banks might reject undesirable projects. For example, Rabobank Group, involved in palm oil plantations in Indonesia, refuses to allow virgin forests to be cut down for new site locations.

Actions Versus Words
Actual enforcement of the principles will remain a gray area, however. Banks have made it clear that EP is a voluntary private initiative and that policing stipulations would be contrary to the spirit of the initiative. But banks can, in effect, police one another through peer pressure. Also, they acknowledge that each lead arranger is only as good as the syndicate's weakest link. Freeloaders, those who are part of the deal but who are not party to EP, will be under the scrutiny of lead arrangers; after all, reputations and financial risk are at stake. Some projects are intractable by their very nature. WestLB, with its OCP pipeline project in Ecuador, knows first hand how indeterminate the dispute can be. Even after revising its mitigation plan to ameliorate the direct impact of the pipeline, it is faced with the realization that the NGOs' main concern is broader and goes to the oil exploration in the Amazon that will follow on the heels of the pipeline project.

If initial reactions to the Equator Principles are indicative, the prospects look good. Concerned parties on all sides can take heart from the fact that banks are taking a bold and effective step toward operating with greater transparency and a greater sense of their responsibilities.

Institutions Which Have Adopted the Equator Principles

ABN AMRO Bank, N.V.
ANZ
Banco Bradesco
Banco de la República Oriental del Uruguay
Banco do Brasil
Banco Galicia
Banco Itaú
BankMuscat
Bank of America
BMO Financial Group
BTMU
Barclays plc
BBVA
BES Group
Calyon
Caja Navarra
CIBC
CIFI
Citigroup Inc.
CORPBANCA
Credit Suisse Group
Dexia Group
Dresdner Bank
E+Co
EKF
Export Development Canada
Financial Bank
FMO
Fortis
HBOS
HSBC Group
HypoVereinsbank
ING Group
Intesa Sanpaolo
JPMorgan Chase
KBC
KfW IPEX-Bank
la Caixa
Lloyds TSB
Manulife
MCC
Mizuho Corporate Bank
Millennium bcp
National Australia Bank
Nordea
Nedbank Group
Rabobank Group
Royal Bank of Canada
Scotiabank
SEB
Societe Generale
Standard Chartered Bank
SMBC
TD Bank Financial Group
The Royal Bank of Scotland
Unibanco
Wachovia
Wells Fargo
WestLB AG
Westpac Banking Corporation

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World Bank/IFC Links

World Bank Guidelines and Criteria Referenced in the Equator Principles

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IFC Guidelines and Policies Referenced in the Equator Principles

Sector-Specific EHS Guidelines

Performance Standards


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