2008/09/10

News: Norway's wealth fund blacklists Rio Tinto

Ethics of investing, can activist shareholders make a difference? Here a major investor talks with its feet by walking away from Rio Tinto for stomping all over local environment in Indonesia with its heavy mining boots.

Reuters reported today that Norway's sovereign wealth fund sold out its stake in Rio Tinto - the worlds largest mining company - in protest against its environmental credentials.

Specific reference was made to the Grasberg mine in Indonesia, and the Finance Ministry is reported as having said yesterday Rio Tinto was a joint venture partner in this mine with US-based Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold, which was blacklisted by the Norwegian fund in 2006, and as having referred to the "severe environmental damage'' being inflicted at this site.

Rio Tinto spokesman Nick Cobban is reported as saying that the environmental measures at the mine were deemed satisfactory by independent audits. He also said that even though Rio Tinto owns a 40% stake in the mine, it is Freeport which runs the operations. "We are surprised and disappointed by the ministry's decision,'' Mr Cobban said.

The ministry also said however that it decided to continue its investments in US-based Monsanto, which develops genetically modified plants, despite recommendations by their ethics council to exclude the firm over concerns it was using child labor in India.

According to the ministry, Norway's ownership activities in Monsanto "have contributed to a significant reduction in the use of child labour in the company's hybrid cotton seed production in India.''

Rio shares had another bad day, losing 5.1%, or $5.47, to close at $102.03, their lowest since September. Major investors and minor stake holders should get active!

2008/09/09

Event: Media Talk - Is Somalia the new Front in the War on Terror?


Thu 11th September, 7.30pm Price: £10.00

Chaired by Patrick Smith (Africa Confidential)

Ahmed Abdisalam (TFG)
Mohamed Gure (Somali Concern Group)
Sally Healy (Chatham House)
Mary Harper (BBC)


Location: 13 Norfolk Place, London W2 1QJ

This event will be webcast live on Fontline Club's website - you can view it for free via the link - www.frontlineclub.com


Since 1991, Somalia has been a dangerous, violent and lawless place, home to numerous conflicts and civil war. From localised inter-tribal and clan warfare, to regional tensions and international disputes, Somalia remains a highly complex battleground. Is Somalia really the new home to Al-Qaeda and the next front in the War on Terror?

Somalia's intricate and fiercely loyal clan-based system means that the country is primarily under the control of clan militia. On a regional level, the longstanding tensions with Ethiopia continue, while the proxy war between the US-backed Ethiopian government and the Eritrean government - which backs the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) - adds an international dimension to the wars.

As power struggles and violent clashes continue between the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and the ICU in the centre and south of the country, the emergence of Al-Shabab - whom the US have branded a terrorist group linked to Al Qaeda - has exacerbated the situation and fuelled speculation that Somalia is the new front on terror and harbouring international terrorist networks.

While the risk of new fighting between Ethiopia and Eritrea is apparently higher than ever as the UN ends its border peacekeeping mission, we examine and demystify the many wars in which Somalia is involved, and which make it such a violent and politically charged country. Is Somalia really the new front on terror?

Ahmed Abdisalam is Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Information, Youth & Sports for the Somali Transitional Federal Government.

Mohamed Gure is a Somali political activist and one of the founders of the Somali Concern Group (SCG) - a political organization that represents the interests of Somalis at home and abroad. The SCG was established in June 2003 and is a voluntary non-governmental, non-profit organization established to promote peace and reconciliation between warring Somali groups through dialogue.

Mary Harper is an African specialist for the BBC.

Sally Healy OBE is an Associate Fellow of the Africa Programe at Chatham House. She was formerly an East Africa specialist at the Foreign Office. She led a collaborative study of conflict in the Horn of Africa, the findings of which were published by Chatham House in June 2008: Lost Opportunities in the Horn of Africa: how Conflicts Connect and Peace agreements unravel.

Patrick Smith is editor of Africa Confidential

Links

Africa Confidential
http://www.africa-confidential.com/home

Frontline Club
http://www.frontlineclub.com/index.php

Blogger: Somalia
http://crigler-somalia.blogspot.com/

2008/09/01

Analysis: Has oil gone M.A.D?

Economic mutually assured destruction? What do trends in high oil prices
mean for global geopolitical stability? Who can afford to disrupt oil
production or supplies? Importers cannot sustain higher prices and fear the
pain, exporters cannot afford the damage higher prices would do to their
export markets and inevitable demand side adjustment.


Given the mutual
interdependence of Russian and European markets, rumoured threats published today (Kommersant and the Telegraph in the UK) that Russia could cut some oil supplies to Europe as soon as Monday in response to European threats of sanctions seem unlikely to materialise, as do the sanctions themselves. Since August 8th and the outbreak of the current Georgia conflict, un-surprisingly there has been a Westward flight of money from Russia. Renaissance Capital suggest US$8-20bn has left the country August 8th to 15th and the flight continues in response to geopolitical destabilisation.
What do trends in high oil prices mean for geopolitical stability?

The world has witnessed a string of "oil wars" as concerns over energy
security rise and major economic powers vie to secure resources for present
and future. With oil prices now as high as they are however, and
threatening to shoot back up to their recent record levels and beyond at
the slightest provocation, the geopolitical situation seems to have grown
increasingly precarious, precarious to the point perhaps, where it is not
unreasonable to speculate that where oil has precipitated conflict, at
current prices oil may have a certain geopolitical stabilising affect -
after all with oil prices already at nose-bleed levels, the pain that would
inevitably be induced by any conflict in an oil region and the consequent
disruption to supply/production, seems likely to have an inhibiting effect
(not least of course for a major oil importing economy such as the US).
This is not a happy or a comfortable equilibrium however, since it is an
order bound together only by a principle of mutually assured destruction
(M.A.D) and increasing competition for resources will increasingly stress
this balance.

With ever more fractious power manoeuvres in eastern Europe, and the Arctic
increasingly crowded with a buzz of survey ships and submarines from all
sides of the circle fighting over where continental shelves begin and end
etc. it seems clear that, current bickering over who is starting the new
cold war aside, we are clearly returning to a cold war type geopolitics.
While things have clearly been brewing for some time, it is sobering to
speculate on the significance of the latest developments in the Georgia
conflict which apparently marks a clear aggressive shift in Russian foreign
policy: an ever more confident and assertive Russia has declared itself
"not afraid of another cold war" and Russia's representative to NATO Dmitri
Rogozin declaring that "There are two dates that have changed the world in
recent years: September 11, 2001, and August 8, 2008," Mr Rogozin explained
that the West has not fully grasped how the Georgia conflict has heightened
Russians' fears about being surrounded by NATO. "They are basically
identical in terms of significance. September 11 motivated the United
States to behave really differently in the world," he said. "That is to
say, Americans realised that even in their homes, they could not feel safe.
They had to protect their interests, outside the boundaries of the US. For
Russia, it is the same thing."

The undeniable economic interdependence of Russia and the west as suppliers
and markets is bound we must expect, to keep this a cold war and to keep
the situation from escalating beyond certain bounds, but given the shift in
Russian sentiment and confidence, there seems to be something of a question
mark over what to expect next from Russia which cannot be good for business
relations and this incident may well demonstrate how tied, in many ways,
Europe's hands are as they are forced to accept the situation.