Standard Bank isolated as other South African banks steer clear of Total’s EACOP oil pipeline

ABSA, FirstRand, Nedbank and Investec all confirm they will not finance EACOP

On Tuesday 1st February, after years of delay, France’s Total and China’s CNOOC Ltd signed the Final Investment Decision (FID) to proceed with the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project. While heralded by the project proponents as a major breakthrough, the project is yet to secure all of the required financing. Now, four out of five of South Africa’s largest lenders have confirmed that they will not be involved. 

FirstRand, ABSA, Nedbank and Investec have become the latest banks to publicly distance themselves from the EACOP, leaving Standard Bank as the only one of South Africa’s big five banks considering financing the project. The project will have severe impacts on people, climate and wildlife, and has already infringed on the rights of the communities who lie in the pipeline’s 1,443km path.

A representative of FirstRand, South Africa’s second largest bank, has confirmed to BankTrack that the bank “is not participating in this project", including under its Rand Merchant Bank and First National Bank divisions. ABSA and Nedbank, the third and fourth largest banks in the country, also confirmed that they are not involved in the project. Similarly, Investec, the Anglo-South African banking and wealth management group, confirmed that it “has no role in this transaction and as far as we are aware does not intend to be involved". [1]

The global #StopEACOP campaign has gained significant momentum in recent months. The announcements from the four South African lenders bring the total number of commercial banks globally making public commitments not to finance the pipeline to 15 - including many of Total’s largest existing financiers. FirstRand, ABSA and Nedbank have all previously participated in finance for new fossil fuel projects led by Total in Africa, meaning their refusal to join the EACOP project is likely to add to Total’s difficulties in finding finance for the project. [2]

South Africa’s Standard Bank, now the only South African bank still holding onto the option of financing the project, has been advising the governments of Uganda and Tanzania on the project since 2017. The bank has said that its support for the project is contingent on the results of an environmental audit, although it has not committed to make this audit public.  Worryingly, CEO Sim Tshabalala said at Standard Bank’s AGM in May 2021 that a draft of that report had raised “no red flags”. [3]

The EACOP, if completed, would pump enough oil to add up to 34.3 million tonnes of carbon dioxide – around seven times the current emissions of Uganda and Tanzania – into the earth’s atmosphere each year, at a time of acute climate crisis. Such emissions are in sharp contrast to the core message of the International Energy Agency Net Zero Roadmap published in May 2021, that if the world is to stay below the 1.5° Paris Agreement goal, there is no need for any new oil infrastructure. [4]

In addition, the project has been associated with a range of severe risks to communities, wildlife, forests and water resources, which BankTrack and partners have set out for financiers in a series of briefings. [5] Recently the Ugandan government has cracked down on community and national organisations that oppose the oil developments or work peacefully to support project-affected communities, arresting human rights defenders, attempting to close down civil society organisations, with Uganda’s President Museveni even publicly insulting civil society groups at the signing of the FID. [6] 

Ryan Brightwell, Human Rights Campaign Lead at BankTrack, comments: “Despite the show of progress with last week’s Final Investment Decision, Total and CNOOC stayed quiet on the crucial question of where the money will come from. And it’s no wonder, given the huge risks posed by the project to communities, nature, water resources like Lake Victoria, the climate, and ultimately to investors. The reality is that this project is struggling to find financiers unscrupulous and reckless enough to back it.”

Diana Nabiruma from Africa Institute for Energy Governance (AFIEGO) says: “It is worrisome that despite overwhelming evidence that communities’ livelihoods have been affected by the EACOP project, the consultant that Standard Bank is relying on to produce a report on which the bank will base its decision as to whether to finance the project says that no red flags had been identified by June 2021. We wonder which communities the consultant studied.”

Omar Elmawi, the #StopEACOP Coordinator, comments: “It is clear that Uganda and Tanzania, and indeed the rest of the world, do not need banks like Standard Bank continuing to finance fossil fuels like the EACOP and associated projects. Continuing to be associated with this project would demonstrate that they are not serious about taking climate action.”

Ireen Twongirwe of the Women for a Green Economy Movement (WoGEM) says: “Uganda’s green economic sectors such as tourism, clean energy and agriculture, the sector which employs the majority of women, have great potential. Estimates by the Ugandan government show that if invested in, these sectors can create nearly 4 million jobs. Standard Bank would do well to increase financial support to these sectors.”

Robyn Hugo, director of climate change engagement at Just Share says: “Standard Bank’s current fossil fuel financing policy does not include any ambitious financing exclusions. This year, following pressure from activists, it has committed to publish a climate strategy and short-, medium-, and long-term targets to reduce its exposure to fossil fuel assets. A credible assessment that is truly aligned with the Paris Goals, would exclude the provision of finance to this highly-destructive project.”

Notes for editors

[1] FirstRand stated to BankTrack in January 2022: "I can confirm that FirstRand is not participating in this project." The bank confirmed this also applies to its Rand Merchant Bank and First National Bank brands and divisions. ABSA Group stated to JustShare in October 2021: "We aren’t involved in EACOP". Nedbank stated to BankTrack in January 2022: "Nedbank has no involvement in the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project." 

Investec stated to BankTrack in January 2022: "Investec has no role in this transaction and as far as we are aware does not intend to be involved." Information on the largest banks in South Africa from Business Tech, July 2021

[2] See for example information on financiers of the Mozambique LNG project, published on the BankTrack website here.

[3] See the StopEACOP campaign’s video footage from the AGM here.

[4] The pipeline will carry 216,000 barrels of crude oil per day, or 10.9 million metric tons per year, at ‘plateau production’ according to the project’s website. According to calculations based on the specific fuel density of the EACOP blend, the emissions from the burning of this fuel would be at least 34.3 million metric tons of CO2-equivalent (CO2e) per year. More information on this calculation is available on request. The IEA’s Net Zero Roadmap is available here.

[5] BankTrack published a Finance Risk Briefing including more detail on the project risks in November 2020, with additional information on more recent developments published in an August 2021 Risk Update on the project.

[6] See for example judicial attacks on human rights defenders detailed here, and the August 2021 joint civil society statement on the attempted closure of 54 civil society organizations here. Uganda’s President Museveni appeared to boast during his speech at the FID ceremony that “his people” were “chasing” NGOs monitoring the project.

For interviews and additional information contact:

#StopEACOP Campaign

Omar Elmawi

Email: info@stopeacop.net

Telephone: +254780343432

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