Tag Archive for: Chinese Investments

The largest infrastructure project in the province of Cordoba has Chinese funding. Two Chinese banks: ICBC and Bank of China will finance 80% of the 8,400 million pesos of the trunk gas pipeline work in the province.

“Below, we offer a google translate version of the original article in Spanish. This translation may not be accurate but serves as a general presentation of the article. For more accurate information, please switch to the Spanish version of the website. In addition, feel free to directly contact in English the person mentioned at the bottom of this article with regards to this topic.”

The map of the ten trunk duct systems had been divided into three groups. The first one assigned to the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht. The second to the construction company China Communications Construction Company and the Argentine construction company Iecsa S.A. And the third to the construction company China Petroleum Pipeline Bureau and the Argentine company Electroingeniería S.A.

One of the formalities that the province had to fulfill was to have the guarantees of the national government to access external financing and, at the same time, guarantee that debt with funds from the federal co-participation.

The works began on August 14 of this year by the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht. This was the only company awarded that presented own financing for the work and does not depend on loans from Chinese banks.

In the month of October, the province placed a debt for 150 million dollars to 10 years of term.

And now in December the Chinese investments were confirmed. The gas pipelines in the provincial interior that will be financed by loans from the two Chinese banks were awarded to the transitory union of companies that formed the Cordobesa Electroingeniería, the China Petroleum Pipeline Bureau and the port of Iecsa, in partnership with the Asian China Communications Construction Company (CCCC). In charge of the negotiation with the Chinese banks is the Minister of Investment and Financing Ricardo Sosa.

From FUNDEPS we are monitoring this project, we have met with officials of the Córdoba Agency for Investment and Financing (ACIF), and we have submitted requests for information to provincial and national ministries. The terms of the legislation that regulates access to knowledge of State acts have expired and there is still no response from the corresponding units.

The questions generated by a work of this magnitude are several. No details have been given of the agreements reached with Chinese banks, it has not been established how this project will effectively reach each of the municipalities involved, nor are the environmental impact reports known. From FUNDEPS, it will be sought that these infrastructure projects do not negatively impact the living conditions of the communities or the environment.

More information

Gas pipelines: Schiaretti reviewed with Prat Gay the progress of contracts with Chinese companies

Gas pipelines: the Nation signs guarantees for Chinese credits

Contact

Gonzalo Roza / Coordinator of the Global Governance Area

gon.roza@fundeps.org

 

Within the long list of Chinese investments in Argentina, the case of aqueducts in the province of Entre Ríos has been one of the most controversial. Irregularities in the bidding process, approval and execution of the project have aroused the suspicion and the demands of various sectors of civil society.

“Below, we offer a google translate version of the original article in Spanish. This translation may not be accurate but serves as a general presentation of the article. For more accurate information, please switch to the Spanish version of the website. In addition, feel free to directly contact in English the person mentioned at the bottom of this article with regards to this topic.”

 

In a changing international context, in which the most important actors have been changing, Argentina has encountered difficulties in accessing traditional sources of financing. Over the last few years, especially since the Kirchner administration, the scenario of foreign investment in Argentina has been marked by the preponderance of the PRC. Several of the major infrastructure projects that are being carried out are behind the backing of Asian companies.

There are two projects that have been working between the Nation and the province of Entre Ríos for some years and had to do with the possibility of building two aqueducts for irrigation in the north of Entre Ríos. For the construction of these, the provincial government and the China State Construction Engineering Corporation (CSCEC) signed a commitment letter for the supply of fresh water, incorporating 200,000 hectares of irrigation.

In mid-June 2013 the CSCEC expressed its interest in investing in infrastructure works in the province of Entre Ríos. During a meeting with representatives of the company, developed at the House of Entre Ríos in Buenos Aires, Governor Sergio Urribarri “proposed three basic lines of action: irrigation works, Paraná-Santa Fe metropolitan link and port development.” According to the governor, the development of the works would be linked to a great extent to increase the productive capacity of the province.

The agreement with China for the construction of the two aqueducts was signed on July 18, 2014. Within the framework of strategic agreements for infrastructure works, signed in the Casa Rosada between Xi Jinping and Cristina Fernadez de Kirchner, meeting in which Urribarri participated.

The aqueducts will have a total length of 546 kilometers between main branch and secondary branches. Two works, the first in the Arroyo Mandisoví basin in the Federation department to implement a collective irrigation system, from the Uruguay River, for rice, citrus and fruit-horticultural production. The second in the department of La Paz to build an aqueduct of the North Entre Ríos, with the contribution of water from the Paraná River and provide a marginal area of ​​access to water for irrigation.

The costs of the works total an amount close to USD 98,000,000, according to the data presented by the “Provincial Agricultural Services Program” in its feasibility reports of which the province should contribute 20%. However, the budget of the CSCEC was USD 430,387,552 awarded without competitive bidding. Funding would come from ICBC, with a credit of USD 366 million at 15 years (with a grace period of 5) with a LIBOR rate of 4.5%. Likewise, the credit agreement provides as applicable law the same as that of England.

The project provoked rejections in some sectors, such as the organizations nucleated within the Multisectoral in Defense of the Heritage of the Entrerrianos, which promoted the nullity of the law that, among other points, enabled the direct granting, without public bidding, of the work to A Chinese capital company, as well as a debt exceeding $ 430 million. The M’biguá Foundation and Environmental Justice also warned about the lack of transparency and information about the project.

The case of aqueducts is the first to reach justice. As discussed above, the Multisectoral for the Defense of the Patrimony of the Entrerrianos presented an unconstitutionality action with respect to the law No. 10.352 that authorized the Provincial Executive to become indebted to the financial institution of China. This action is based on the fact that this law has not fulfilled the formal requirements that the provincial constitution urges for its approval, for example: there was no Environmental Impact Assessment, there is no opinion from the commissions of Finance and Economy, or the prosecution Of state, among other irregularities. The total lack of controls in the legislative process, the treatment on tables of the norm, the absence of debate on the subject and, especially, the secrecy with which the government was managed not to make known the project, is another aspect Demand.

Among the main points of the complete demand are:

– Ineffectiveness of Law 10.352 for irregularities in its processing.

– Non-observance of the principle of reasonableness.

Authorization to the Governor to agree and keep secret the contract with the Chinese Bank.

– Authorization to the Governor to contract with the Chinese Bank ICBC a loan in which Entre Ríos accepts to be governed by the English legislation.

– Violation of the constitutional duty to publicize acts of government.

– Deprivation of information as a human right.

– The previous and precautionary implementation of Environmental Impact Studies and its evaluation processes with the due Public Hearings and the dictating of the Administrative Acts prior to the authorization of contracting of the work and the authorization of the conclusion of investment agreements and / Or indebtedness.

– Violation of the Public Accounting Law. (Arrogating thus the P.E. unconstitutionally own powers of the Legislative Power).

– Violation of the Public Works Law.

– The constitutional guarantees contained in Section II – Economic, Labor and Sustainable Development of the Provincial Constitution were ignored.

According to local media: “From a commission of five million dollars that the provincial state must pay for the operation, up to the costs not calculated of interest, expropriation of land for the work and other costs, contemplating also the implementation of increases Tributary to cover the payment of the credit, the economic questions to the norm are numerous. The first of these, in any case, is the amount of the credit: nobody understands very well how the entrerriano government arrived to calculate both works by more than 430 million dollars when Prosap had budgeted, some months before, less than 100 million” .

According to Jorge Daneri, a member of the M’biguá Foundation, a package of potential mega investments in the region is being formed which, in addition to the aqueducts, would include a hydroelectric dam project between the provinces of Corrientes and Santa Fe on the northern border Of Entre Ríos. According to Dr. Daneri, the mechanism is the same in all projects: there is no parliamentary debate on the projects, let alone in the provinces involved, therefore, the silence of federalism of social consultation and citizen consultation.

From FUNDEPS we have been working on the follow-up of the case of trunk gas pipelines in the province of Cordoba, which also have Chinese funding. Part of the process of approval and execution of this project, can be identified with what happened in Entre Ríos. The lack of transparency in certain issues such as the presentation and publication of the environmental impact study, sound an alarm with respect to environmental standards and DD.HH.

In addition, we consider it of special importance to highlight that the recent importance of the People’s Republic of China in terms of investments in infrastructure projects translates into a need for civil society to monitor the design, approval and implementation processes of these projects. The irregularities mentioned above are the result of policies that still lack transparency and are not part of a accountability paradigm.

More information

A Chinese Agreement

Entre Ríos: “with the pretext of building two aqueducts is to consummate a very large swindle”

Law of aqueducts: filed suit against the “scam” of Urribarri

Law of aqueducts: the Multisectorial will collect signatures to repeal the text

Mid Paraná Dam, aqueducts and China, the spring of hope

Contact

Gonzalo Roza, gon.roza@fundeps.org

What information is available about Chinese investments in Latin-America and the Caribbean? How do these investments affect the natural resources governance in Peru, Colombia, Argentina y Mexico?

El Grupo Regional de Financiamiento e Infraestructura (GREFI) analizó los cambios que se están produciendo en el flujo de inversiones chinas en la región y sus impactos en la gobernanza de los recursos naturales, en un evento en el marco de las Reuniones de Primavera del Banco Mundial y el FMI de este año.

A lo largo de las últimas décadas, las relaciones entre China y América Latina se han intensificado enormemente. Se estima que el intercambio de comercial ha crecido de 12 mil a 169 mil millones de dólares entre los años 2000 al 2014 y el año 2015. En este sentido, Pekín anunció la creación de un fondo de inversión de 10 mil millones de dórales para la cooperación bilateral con Latinoamérica para proyectos de tecnología, energía, minería e infraestructura. Su estrategia de crecimiento en América Latina es bastante clara.

Frente a sus inmensas necesidades de materias primas, llega a competir con otras instituciones financieras que por su larga historia y por el trabajo realizado a partir de grandes movimientos de la sociedad civil de la región, han ido generando mecanismos de acceso a la información y políticas para la protección socioambiental. Estos procesos han sido largos y siguen su curso. Nuevos desafíos como la armonización del derecho a la consulta previa y el cambio climático con las estrategias de crecimiento económico para nuestros países, ha hecho que se sigan exigiendo cambios y mejoras.

Con la llegada de China y una alta canalización de recursos en la región, acompañados de una estrategia clara en cuanto su modelo de crecimiento en la región que necesita de materias primas a un ritmo constante, GREFI trae a la discusión algunas preguntas que creemos fundamentales para nuestros países ¿Qué sucede cuando un actor de estas características llega a nuestros países? ¿Cómo se puede acceder a la información sobre las inversiones procedentes de China en la región? ¿Cómo impactan estas inversiones?

Los conflictos socioambientales relacionados a inversiones extractivas y de infraestructura son una realidad reciente debido a marcos regulatorios débiles, baja capacidad de supervisión de los mismos, conflictos entre diferentes niveles de gobierno e mecanismo de consulta ciudadana inadecuados o inexistentes, entre muchos otros factores. Sumado a esto es importante considerar el poco conocimiento que todavía se tiene sobre las compañías chinas, y sobre todo de los marcos regulatorios nacionales con los que trabajan.

La falta de transparencia, el poco acceso a información relevante sobre financiamiento chino y acuerdos bilaterales firmados, es otro asunto sobre el que todos debemos demandar cambios, antes que nuestra capacidad de exigencia se haga más pequeña en comparación con la creciente influencia de china en las políticas de desarrollo en América Latina.

Sobre GREFI

El Grupo Regional sobre Financiamiento e Infraestructura (GREFI)está integrado por cuatro organizaciones de la sociedad civil de la región de América Latina y el Caribe (ALC): Asociación Ambiente y Sociedad (AAS) de Colombia; Derecho Ambiente y Recursos Naturales (DAR) de Perú; Fundar, Centro de Análisis e Investigación de México; y la Fundación para el Desarrollo de Políticas Sustentables (FUNDEPS) de Argentina.

Fuente: www.grefi.info

 

Contacto:

Juan Carballo – Director Ejecutivo

juanmcarballo@fundeps.org

Gonzalo Roza – Área de Gobernabilidad Global

gon.roza@fundeps.org

The discussion in general terms about China´s financial Role in Latin America. On the other hand, the discussion in particular focuses on this phenomena in Argentina. 

De acuerdo a datos recientemente publicados por el Inter-American Dialogue, China sigue ampliando su rol como financiador de grandes proyectos en la región. Durante el 2015, el financiamiento chino a Latinoamérica fue mayor que el del Banco Mundial y el Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo sumados. El financiamiento chino sigue teniendo un fuerte foco en el sector extractivo y de infraestructura; desde 2005 China ha financiado proyectos de infraestructura por 40,3 mil millones de dólares y 70,2 mil millones en el sector energético.

En este contexto, Juan Carballo, Director Ejecutivo de FUNDEPS, participó de la mesa de diálogo que se realizó a fines de enero en Washington DC organizado por el Inter-American Dialogue. En este encuentro, representantes del sector público, privado y de la sociedad civil discutieron sobre las implicancias de esta creciente relevancia de China en la región en cuanto a los estándares sociales y ambientales de este financiamiento.

Desde FUNDEPS, se continuará monitoreando el perfil del financiamiento proveniente de fuentes chinas, los estándares socio-ambientales de estos proyectos y el respeto a la normativa de participación, acceso a la información y protección ambiental.

 

Más información:

Contacto:

Gonzalo Roza – Coordinador del Área de Gobernabilidad Global
gon.roza@fundeps.org