Multinational Monitor |
|||
JUNE 2000 FEATURES: The World Bank's Revolving Door: Share Program Exchanges World Bank and Corporate Employees Warning: World Bank Policies Destroy Forests. Internal Report Documents Bank Contribution to Deforestation Death by Overwork: Corporate Pressure on Employees Takes a Fatal Toll in Japan The Fight for Water and Democracy Damming Laos, Damning the Poor Unhealthy Policies from the World Bank DEPARTMENTS: Editorial The Front |
Warning: World Bank Policies Destroy Forests. Internal Report Documents Bank Contribution to DeforestationBy Korinna Horta Virtually all tropical forests are located in developing countries, and no single global institution plays a bigger role in developing countries than the World Bank. Environmentalist campaigns in the 1980s against the World Bank's contribution to forest destruction -- through support for commercial logging, road-building through forested areas and megadams that flooded large forest areas -- led in the early 1990s to a rethink at the Bank. In 1991, the Bank published a Forest Policy paper which ended Bank support for commercial logging in primary forests and promised a new Bank approach that would emphasize conservation, poverty reduction and support for the rights of local people. Nearly a decade later, the World Bank's Operations Evaluation Department (OED, its internal review agency), published a review in November 1999 of the Bank's implementation of its Forest Policy Paper of 1991. The OED report documents that the Bank's performance has been a flop. "Bank influence on containing rates of deforestation in tropical moist forests has been negligible in the 20 countries identified for Bank focus," the report concludes. The OED finds that World Bank has largely ignored the guidelines provided in the Forest Policy Paper, and that it has paid little attention to the impacts of its loans on forests. Most strikingly, the OED report identifies the economic policies promoted by World Bank structural adjustment programs as one of the driving forces of deforestation -- meaning the Bank is making the problem worse. In a break from previous World Bank studies, the OED report does not blame poor farmers and "slash and burn" agriculture for deforestation, nor is demographic pressure mentioned as a major underlying cause of forest loss. The new report declares globalization and economic policies designed to promote exports, bad governance, corruption and out-of control logging companies to be the driving forces of deforestation in the world. Adjustment and Deforestation Some of the economic policies identified by the OED report as harmful to forests, such as trade liberalization and export promotion, lie at the very heart of the World Bank's structural adjustment lending. Structural adjustment loans are made to governments in exchange for their commitment to adopt a set of policy changes, including promotion of exports and opening up to foreign investment. Last year, for the first time in the World Bank's history, the volume of structural adjustment loans was larger than the volume of regular project loans, representing more than 50 percent of the institution's approximately $30 billion annual lending in fiscal year 1999. The OED highlighted a range of structural adjustment measures that contribute to deforestation. "[P]olicies associated with economic crisis and adjustment -- such as devaluation, export incentives and removal of price controls -- tend to boost production of tradable goods, including agricultural and forestry products. In doing so, and without mitigatory measures, they encourage forest conversion," the report states. "Further, constrained fiscal situations may lead to reduced public spending on environmental protection and weaken the capacities of forest ministries to enforce laws and regulations." Yet the OED report concludes that "the Bank has made little progress in addressing the impacts of adjustment lending on the forest sector." In a few cases, the Bank has added special conditionalities to protect forests to structural adjustment packages. However, the OED report found that these measures "lack credibility," because building capacity and institutions require long-term efforts and agreement from national governments. While emphasizing the distinction between the processes of globalization and Bank adjustment lending, Uma Lele, an adviser in the World Bank's OED and the chief author of the November report, says that "the Bank's own adjustment lending must do a better job of environmental impact assessment." Noting the technical difficulty in conducting such an analysis (as compared to environmental assessments for project loans), she says that she is relatively optimistic that the Bank will move in this direction. Mainline World Bank officials did not respond to requests for comment on the OED report. Broken Promises The 1991 Forest Policy Paper emphasized the importance of respect for indigenous peoples' rights and local community participation in project development. With some caveats, environmental and development organizations applauded this policy as a break from the past and as offering hope for a more holistic Bank approach to the world's forests. The Forest Policy instructed World Bank staff that all types of investments, including infrastructure construction and energy and mining projects, had to take into account their potential impacts on forests. It also required that the World Bank's investment plans for a country, known as country assistance strategies, and all economic sector work consider possible impacts on forests. But the 1991 policy's promise has not been met, the OED report finds. After reviewing hundreds of project documents, the OED study concludes that the Forest Policy has largely been ignored at all levels and that forest-related World Bank lending had done little to alleviate poverty. While "plans for incorporating participation in Bank projects have become more ambitious," the report states, "implementation has lagged." The report cites five "weaknesses" to account for this implementation failure: "inadequate reflection of social, technical, institutional and political realities on the ground in project design; omission of key stakeholders during project preparation and implementation; inadequate time and resources allowed to develop genuine participatory approaches; lack of sufficient expertise in participatory techniques among Bank staff and consultants; and poor choice of monitoring and evaluation indicators." In addition, it found that the Bank had neglected governance issues and that its activities in the area of institution building had been weak. Despite its claims of being a "Knowledge Bank," the OED report found that the World Bank is frequently oblivious to the local political, economic and social realities in regions affected by its projects. The report stated that "crucial information" on land tenure (land ownership arrangements) is frequently missing from key Bank documents, even though this information is essential to respect and protect indigenous rights and to advance effective conservation schemes. Which Way For The Bank? The OED report reveals that a whole decade has been lost in which the world's forests could have benefited from improved protection. In order to address the problem, the OED report urges the creation of incentives to ensure that Bank staff have the necessary resources and can be held accountable for implementing forest policy guidelines. But environmentalists were stunned by other OED recommendations, which they found entirely divorced from the report's findings. Many environmentalists believe senior World Bank staff whose goal is to increase lending for forestry projects significantly influenced these recommendations. The OED report claims that the prohibition of direct financing for logging in moist primary tropical forests has had the effect of discouraging innovative investments in forestry -- implying that investments in logging can save forests. Furthermore, it claims that the prohibition has led to a "chill" in overall lending for forestry -- even though, as the OED itself documents, annual Bank lending for forestry-related projects has increased by 78 percent since adoption of the Forest Policy Paper in 1991. In fact, a specific policy directive published in 1993 created an enormous loophole allowing direct support for logging under special circumstances which are not defined in detail. The OED's Uma Lele says that the OED review shows that in individual cases the Bank is funding important forest projects that facilitate both conservation and poverty elimination, especially in tree-poor countries. In China, she says, Bank-supported tree planting may absorb one fifth of the country's carbon emissions. "It would be a mistake to throw out the baby with the bath water," she says, in arguing for increased funding. Environmental and development NGOs have emphasized that small-scale community-based logging on a pilot basis might provide valuable learning experiences about how to manage forests sustainably for the benefit of local people. But, citing the extensive recent record of failure, they have resolutely opposed large-scale industrial forestry in the tropics. Industrial systems, they insist, cannot sustain timber yields over time, much less protect ecosystems and biodiversity. And as the OED report itself acknowledges, it has done nothing to improve the livelihoods of local communities. What remains to be seen is whether the Bank in the years ahead will follow the implicit recommendations in the OED report's findings, while strengthening the 1991 Forest Policy Paper to provide added focus on boreal forests in Russia which since the end of the Cold War have increasingly become the target for World Bank investments; or whether the Bank will instead open the floodgates for new large-scale industrial forestry investments, thereby spelling an ever faster acceleration of global deforestation. |