Friends of the Earth Japan expresses grave concerns on IFI financing nuclear power projects because of the reasons listed below.
Media reports of criminal investigations of Trafigura by US & Swiss law enforcement authorities have come to light that put into question whether the company should be eligible to continue to receive support from the EXIM.
After supporting almost no fossil fuel finance in the first two years of the Biden Administration, EXIM has pivoted hard toward fossil fuels.
Our 50 civil society organizations from Papua New Guinea, Pacific, France and beyond call on the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) to commit not to finance or provide any financial support to the Papua LNG project.
We are writing as 222 civil society organisations and dozens of experts from 50 countries committed to continue building an intersectional movement for public finance for a just energy transition.
The Export-Import Bank of the United States (hereafter referred to as US EXIM or EXIM), the US Government’s export credit agency, is falling far short of this commitment.
FOE US highly supports the publication of this a policy but the current draft is sparse on details and specific requirements.
Our 27 civil society organizations across the US and Pacific call US EXIM to reject the Category A Papua Liquefied Natural Gas Project
WBG does not have the legitimacy to play a greater role in financing global public goods while it continues to finance activities that actively destroy these.