Greasing the Skids of Corruption
from the 11-part series
Making a Killing
The Business of War
The Center for Public Integrity
website
In July 15, 2000, the Marathon Oil Company
sent $13,717,989.31 to an account in Jersey, an island in the
English Channel with stringent bank secrecy laws. The owner of
the Jersey account was Sonangol, Angola's state oil company. The
sum represented one-third of a bonus that the Houston, Texas-based
company agreed to pay the Angolan government a year earlier for
rights to pump the country's offshore oil reserves.
That same day, Sonangol transferred an
identical sum of money out of Jersey to another Sonangol account
in an unknown location. Over the course of that summer, large
sums of money traveled from the Jersey account to, among others,
a private security company owned by a former Angolan minister,
a charitable foundation run by the Angolan president, and a private
Angolan bank that counts an alleged arms dealer among its shareholders.
Angola's byzantine political and financial
dealings are no secret; the country falls among the lowest rankings
in Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index.
Still, oil companies from the United States and other countries
continue to do business with the Luanda government and Angola's
state-owned oil company. A variety of groups, from human rights
organizations to diplomats, have raised concerns that oil revenue
goes to government ministers' pockets or to buy arms to fight
the country's recently ended civil war. But not even an International
Monetary Fund monitoring program has been able to produce hard
evidence of such activity.
The cost in human lives of this misdirection
of the nation's wealth is incalculable, and far beyond the estimated
500,000 killed in the 25-year-long civil war. For years, Angola
has scraped the bottom of the United Nations' social indicator
indexes: 30 percent of its children die before the age of five,
and average life expectancy is just 45 years.
According to the Angolan Petroleum Ministry,
Angola exported $6.9 billion worth of oil in 2000, $2.9 billion
of that exported by Sonangol. Economists estimate that up to $1
billion in oil revenue flowed out of the country and into private
bank accounts in 2000 alone, despite a national law that gives
ownership of Angola's oil and, presumably, the wealth it
produces to its citizens.
Now, an investigation by the International
Consortium of Investigative Journalists provides a glimpse into
this system where money from multinational oil companies moves
through labyrinths of international bank accounts, avoiding national
budgets and banks. It shows how national and international laws
governing corporate behavior-including the Foreign Corrupt Practices
Act, enacted by the United States in 1977 after revelations of
bribery by U.S. companies-have failed to prevent this movement
of money from corporate accounts to private ones. And it reveals
that oil companies around the world devote millions of dollars
to influencing international policies toward the countries where
they pump oil, often attempting to block the efforts of first
world governments to sanction Third World countries where corruption
flourishes and bloody conflicts rage.
Angola is certainly not unique as a country
where conflict and corruption are fueled by petroleum dollars.
In Sudan, where oil revenue from Chinese, Canadian and Malaysian
petroleum companies reportedly doubled the government's defense
budget between 1998 and 2000, government forces have been accused
of displacing tens of thousands of villagers to make way for oil
concessions, often by bombing villages, burning homes and killing
resisters. In 1993, Shell Oil became the focus of an international
boycott when activist Ken Saro-Wiwa led thousands of Nigerians
to protest the oil industry's impact on Nigeria's environment
and culture. The late dictator Sani Abacha had Saro-Wiwa and seven
other activists hanged for their temerity. Abacha is accused of
stealing some $3 billion in state revenue during the five years
he ruled Nigeria, money which that country's current government
is now trying to extricate from Swiss banks. And attempts by the
newest petroleum hot spot in West Africa, Equatorial Guinea, to
enter into an IMF loan program were put on hold by the institution
out of concern for the government's "lack of fiscal discipline
and transparency."
Some oil companies contribute to the problem
directly by hiring corrupt government militaries to provide security
for their operations. In Indonesia, Mobil Oil admitted to supplying
food, fuel and equipment to soldiers hired to protect oil installations.
The soldiers were later implicated in massacres in the breakaway
province of Aceh and reportedly used Mobil's equipment to dig
mass graves, though Mobil denied knowledge of any abuses. In June
2001, the U.S.-based International Labor Rights Fund filed suit
against ExxonMobil (the corporation formed of the merger between
Exxon and Mobil) on behalf of Aceh villagers who suffered abuses
at the hands of these soldiers. A similar situation occurred in
Burma, where the ruling military junta is so brutal that nearly
all foreign investment has pulled out of the country. In 1995,
a Unocal official admitted not only to hiring Burmese troops to
protect two natural gas pipelines but to supplying them with intelligence
such as aerial photographs; a California court recently gave the
go-ahead to a 1997 lawsuit filed against Unocal by Burmese citizens
seeking compensation for the abuses they suffered by soldiers
working for the company. Unocal has denied culpability. Unocal's
French partner, Total Oil, hired its own Burmese troops and supplied
them with food and trucks, according to human rights groups and
media reports.
Oil companies insist their job is to pump
oil and not get involved in the politics of the countries where
they do business. "The problem is that the good Lord didn't
see fit to always put oil and gas resources where there are democratic
governments," Vice President Dick Cheney remarked in 1996
when he was the CEO of the global oil services giant, Halliburton
Company. But in countries with unstable governments, rebel insurgencies,
and widespread corruption, such official distance can be hard
to maintain.
'Turning a Blind Eye'
The motor of Angola's economy floats 100
miles off Africa's Atlantic coast on a ship the size of a football
field. Rigs rise hundreds of feet in the air from a steel platform
moored to the ocean floor 440 feet [1,360 meters] below by steel
chains and flexible pipes that suck oil from the sea bed into
the ship's gigantic hull. Costing $2.6 billion, the ship that
pumps oil from the Girassol field (Girassol is the Portuguese
word for sunflower) is the biggest and most expensive of its kind,
capable of storing 2 million barrels of oil, housing 140 people
and generating enough electricity to light a city of 100,000.
Since the 1973 and 1979 oil shocks, Western
corporations and governments alike have sought supplies of crude
oil beyond the Persian Gulf. Already, one in every seven barrels
of oil that the United States imports comes from Africa, and that
figure will likely increase as the United States continues to
diversify its oil sources, especially following the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks. By 2015, a report by the National Intelligence
Council predicted, a quarter of all the oil America imports will
come from West Africa.
Angola will be one of the prime beneficiaries
of that diversification. The country lies on the southern curve
of the Gulf of Guinea, anchoring an oil-rich geologic shelf running
across the Atlantic from Brazil that has turned Nigeria, Cameroon
and Gabon into major crude exporters.
Angola's oil resources were first developed
in 1956 when the country was a colony of Portugal, which ruled
Angola until 1975. Immediately after the Portuguese pulled out
of Angola, an armed struggle for control of the country flared
among the Marxist-based Movement for the Popular Liberation of
Angola (MPLA), the Front for the National Liberation of Angola
(FNLA), and the National Union for Total Independence of Angola
(UNITA). The MPLA managed to establish a functional government
in Luanda and in 1976 created a national oil company, Sociedade
Nacional de Combustiveis, known as Sonangol, to manage the burgeoning
oil industry. From the start, Sonangol's revenue was appropriated
as a war chest to fund the long fight against UNITA, which was
funded by sales from diamonds and timber as well as South Africa's
apartheid regime and the U.S. government. The FNLA, the MPLA's
other rival, had disintegrated as a movement by the late 1970s.
The war barely touched Angola's oil production,
largely because the bulk of the reserves are offshore. Angola
produced an average of 742,000 barrels of oil per day (bpd) in
2001. The massive Girassol field, which began producing oil in
December 2001, boosted that figure to 860,000 in January 2002,
and is projected to increase Angola's output to nearly 1 million
bpd by the end of 2002. As more fields begin producing, oil industry
analysts expect Angola to reach 2 million bpd by 2007, generating
up to $14 billion annually for the Angolan government.
Oil provides the bulk of the Angolan government's
revenue; in 2002, oil money will account for more than 90 percent
of Angola's $5 billion budget. The government has traditionally
devoted a large portion of its budget to military spending, ranging
from 27 percent to 41 percent between 1995 and 1999. The combined
spending on health and education accounted for less than 11 percent
during the same period. Yet the same 1978 law that established
Sonangol names Angola's people as the sole owners of its petroleum.
The cause of this gap between resource
wealth and terrestrial poverty, familiar in many oil-producing
states, is the topic of much study and debate. Angola has fallen
prey to a common ailment of oil-rich countries in which they become
over-reliant on mineral wealth and fail to develop other sectors
of their economy. However, its government has also earned a reputation
as one of the world's most corrupt, with its lopsided military
spending, budgetary mismanagement and resistance to external supervision.
The IMF discontinued a program designed to prepare the country
for debt-relief structuring in August 2001 after Angola failed
to meet benchmarks like lowering inflation and increasing fiscal
transparency. In July 2001, Médecins Sans Frontières
released a damning report accusing the government and UNITA of
"turning a blind eye to the obvious, serious and often acute
humanitarian needs of the Angolan people."
By the late 1980s, the Angolan government's
fight against UNITA had become so costly that it began racking
up debt from foreign lenders it couldn't pay back. The resulting
poor credit ratings, combined with exploding inflation, gutted
the country's economy and central bank. To maintain foreign investment,
the government opened up a series of bank accounts outside Angola
as a safe arena in which to conduct business, said Sonangol CEO
Manuel Vicente. A complex system of offshore accounts and trusts
emerged that allowed oil money to move directly to foreign creditors
without passing through the government's budget or banks, according
to Global Witness, a London-based advocacy group that examines
conflicts linked to natural resources.
Those with experience in Angola, from
business executives to workers with non-governmental organizations
to members of Angola's opposition parties, acknowledge the system's
existence. However, the diplomatic and business worlds have been
loathe to raise their voices in protest because of their stake
in Angola's oil wealth. Even financial institutions such as the
IMF and World Bank avoid direct implication of the Angolan government
in their reports, pointing out in private that their agencies
are tasked with restructuring economies, not investigating them.
Yet all acknowledge the system's draining effect on the country's
economy.
In 2000, the IMF asked Sonangol to conduct
an analysis, or "diagnostic," of its accounting practices,
one of a list of benchmarks the government had to meet in order
to qualify for the debt-restructuring program. The accounting
firm KPMG, which won the contract for the diagnostic, was tasked
with comparing payment records and production figures for 1999
and 2000 to government budgetary figures. The diagnostic did not,
however, examine how past revenue was spent; in fact, the government
of Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos insisted that the
diagnostic extend no further back than fiscal year 1999. It is
up to the Angolan government whether the diagnostic's July 2002
final report will be released to the public. Two interim reports
have been kept confidential.
"We're trying to work out where all
this money is going," an accountant familiar with the diagnostic
told ICIJ. "Most or all of the money goes to offshore bank
accounts and disappears somewhere. (Sonangol) is bypassing the
central bank, dollars are going outside the purview of the bank,
and the bank is not aware of what's going on."
Follow the Money
Vicente, Sonangol's chief executive, appears
to be a jovial man as he smiles over a drink in the bar of Washington,
D.C.'s, swank Four Seasons Hotel. Vicente speaks proudly of Sonangol's
many subsidiaries including a shipping company, a telecommunications
branch and an aviation company its investments in the oil
industries of neighbors such as Cape Verde and Congo, and the
inauguration of a "Houston Express" plane shuttle from
Houston to Luanda funded by a coalition of U.S. and Angolan businesses.
Vicente admits that Sonangol maintains
"around 10" bank accounts in several locations outside
Angola, including in Switzerland, Portugal and London. The accounts
are affiliated with either Sonangol's London or New York satellites,
established chiefly to facilitate the oil trading done through
those offices, he said.
"Basic risk management" is what
Vicente calls the structure. "You don't want to have all
your eggs in one basket." One of those accounts, Vicente
says, was established in 1983 with Lloyd's TSB on the isle of
Jersey in the Channel Islands. Jersey is one of the world's busiest
offshore banking havens, known for closely guarding the identities
of its depositors and generating criticism from other European
nations for not cooperating with investigations into money laundering.
Jack Blum, a Washington, D.C., attorney specializing in international
fraud and capital flight, points out that since England does not
tax bank accounts held by foreign parties, there can be only one
incentive for maintaining an account in Jersey rather than London.
"The incentive for keeping money
in a place like Jersey can only be secrecy, but a parastatal company
should be anything but secret," said Blum. "When companies
ask me about red flags signifying when a payment is suspicious,
I say, 'when they want a large amount of money sent to an offshore
account.'"
Sonangol financial information obtained
by ICIJ, charting activity from June 1 to Sept. 1, 2000, shows
an interconnected web of 14 different Lloyd's accounts. Some are
dormant and collect only small interest payments, some move several
million dollars a day. Though they cover only a three-month period,
the accounts' stream of money provides a glimpse of the structure
of subterfuge behind which national revenue can hide.
Sonangol, itself, accounted for more than
half the traffic: the Jersey accounts saw some $78 million pass
through on the way to other Sonangol branches and accounts. The
account also received a $330,000 deposit from the national oil
company of the West African island-nation of Sao Tome and Principe,
of which Sonangol owns a 40-percent stake, and a $60,000 deposit
from the Congolese national oil company, in which Sonangol also
invests.
Yet aside from these transactions, less
than 1 percent of the total paid out went to companies directly
involved with the oil industry, such as oil service providers
or consultants. The rest went to address government economic priorities,
such as servicing debt from oil-backed loans. The fact that government
business was conducted through offshore Sonangol accounts
and that Sonangol receipts never made it back to Angola
violates a 1995 Angolan law requiring all foreign currency receipts
and government revenue to pass through the central bank.
When Angola's financial instability led
creditors to demand more concrete forms of collateral, it turned
to its most valuable resource oil. Oil-backed loans are
repaid with proceeds from oil sales that go directly to creditors,
bypassing budget ledgers. Transparency advocates criticize oil-backed
loans because they allow money to vanish into what one economist
called a "black hole." Financial institutions like the
IMF also frown on them because the high-interest rates of the
short-term loans cost Angola an estimated $50 million a year.
Global Witness counted seven loans worth $3.55 billion between
September 2000 and October 2001 alone, despite Angola's agreement
with the IMF to limit borrowing in 2001 to $269 million.
The Jersey accounts show what a quick
and potent injection of cash such loans can bring: Union Bank
of Switzerland (UBS) alone pumped $35.6 million into Sonangol
in the three-month period, while Sonangol paid UBS only $171,000
in debt servicing. UBS has extended some $1 billion in oil-backed
loans to Angola since 1989, including a March 1999 loan providing
$575 million.
Aside from money that Sonangol transferred
to its subsidiaries during the three-month period, the largest
block of cash to leave the Jersey accounts some $7.2 million
went to construction companies. Some of the global construction
industry's largest names, such as Odebrecht of Brazil, Engil of
Portugal and Dar Al-Handasah of Egypt, are deeply involved with
the Angolan government's plan to rebuild the country's infrastructure.
Odebrecht has contracted with the government for a number of major
infrastructure jobs, such as constructing the country's public
water and irrigation network. Dar Al-Handasah, which maintains
an office in Luanda, built the government's new administration
complex and the city's water supply system.
Executives from several of these construction
companies, as well as oil companies, hold seats on the boards
of Fundacao Eduardo dos Santos (FESA), the president's personal
charity foundation, which also received $33,333 from the Jersey
accounts. Charitable organizations are another "black hole"
in Angola's financial galaxy into which millions of dollars have
allegedly disappeared. The Angolan government requires most foreign
investors to contribute money to social development projects,
such as rebuilding schools or roads, according to oil industry
sources. Sonangol created a "social bonus fund" to receive
this money, though the number of bank accounts linked to the fund
have reportedly mushroomed to more than 20, and the boundaries
between them and Sonangol's myriad other accounts are unclear.
For example, $100,000 left the Jersey accounts in August 2000
for the Vatican, which directed it toward a branch of the Capuchin
Order, based in Luanda, to build a social activity center.
Neither the government nor Sonangol will
divulge how much money these "social bonus fund" accounts
contain, though the figure has been estimated at $60 million to
$200 million. Some $150 million in payments to secure contracts,
known as "signature bonuses," reportedly found its way
into another fund named the Fundo de Desenvolvimento Economico
e Social in 1999, though the government will not reveal how or
where the money was spent.
The foundations tasked with carrying out
the projects have also been tainted by allegations of corruption,
particularly FESA. The foundation describes itself as a government
partner in initiatives ranging from professional training to building
universities and orphanages. Critics, however, call it a personal
slush fund for Dos Santos that fortifies his myth by crediting
him for projects such as building schools that should be funded
by the state anyway. Executives from Odebrecht, Dar Al-Handasah,
U.S. oil company Texaco, Norwegian oil company Norsk Hydro, Israeli
security company Long Range Avionics Technologies and several
Sonangol executives sit on FESA's general assembly and project
boards. (ICIJ sought to interview Dos Santos about FESA and other
matters, but a request to the Angolan Embassy in Washington, D.C.,
went unanswered.)
Close presidential relationships are in
evidence in other account transactions as well: On June 5, two
payments totaling $2.4 million went to Teleservices, a private
security firm that guards diamond mines and oil-storage facilities
in Soyo and Cabinda. Teleservices' principal shareholders are
Gen. Antonio dos Santos Franca, a former military chief of staff
and Angolan ambassador to Washington, and former Angolan Chief
of Staff Joao Baptista de Matos. On Aug. 15, 2000, $2.2 million
was paid out to Banco Africano de Investimentos (BAI), Angola's
first private bank, in which Sonangol is also a 17.5 percent shareholder.
Other shareholders include a company owned by Pierre Falcone,
an alleged arms dealer arrested in 2000 in connection with the
French oil-for-arms scandal known as Angolagate, whose trial is
ongoing. (Attempts to reach Falcone for comment through his lawyers
were unsuccessful).
Two of the largest payments $1.6
million and $3.9 million, each on Aug. 2, 2000 went to Concord
Establishment. Concord Establishment is the Liechtenstein-based
parent company of Catermar, which provides catering and other
support services to the oil industry. Catermar, based in Lisbon,
has worked with Sonangol for more than 20 years, and recently
entered into an agreement with Sonangol to operate a chain of
supermarkets in Luanda. Catermar CEO Luis Correa de Sa says the
large payment went toward several outstanding bills Sonangol had
accumulated.
The significance of the Sonangol transactions
lies not in any single one, but in their indication that large
amounts of oil wealth are moving through accounts and settling
government business out of the purview of budgetary monitors.
Under Angolan law, all government revenue, including Sonangol
receipts, should be channeled through the central bank. CEO Vicente
says Sonangol reports on income from each barrel of oil to Angola's
Parliament at quarterly meetings and directs all of the profits
remaining after the company pays its bills to the central bank
as required by law (though the company does collect a fee for
oil trading). However, when asked why an outside contractor such
as Teleservices, which provides services in Angola, was paid from
an outside bank rather than the central bank as required by law,
Vicente qualified the payment as a "mistake."
"We had a lot of weaknesses and problems
here two years ago, but we have made an agreement with the government
to restructure the company," Vicente claimed, maintaining
that the discontinued IMF program was part of that effort.
The Signature Bonus
Amid the stream of executives rolling
their overnight cases in and out of Washington's Four Seasons
Hotel in December 2001 were lawyers for some of America's largest
corporations Conoco, General Electric, Enron and Boeing,
among others. They were in Washington to attend "What Every
In-House Counsel Should Know About the Foreign Corrupt Practices
Act," an annual conference organized by the American Conference
Institute to boost U.S. companies' awareness and enforcement of
the act. Attendees listened as representatives from the U.S. Justice
Department and Transparency International spoke on topics such
as "Dealing With Corruption by Foreign Competitors in International
Markets" and "Accounting and Record Keeping: What's
Required and the Implications of Getting it Wrong."
The oil industry became almost synonymous
with bribery in 1973 when Gulf Oil admitted funneling more than
$10 million to U.S. and foreign politicians over several years.
When the Securities and Exchange Commission responded with a questionnaire
asking American corporations if they paid bribes, more than 400
corporations including major oil companies like Exxon
acknowledged making questionable payments to foreign government
officials, politicians and political parties. The result was the
passage in 1977 of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act the
world's first, and toughest, anti-bribery legislation.
U.S. businesses complained that the law
put them at a competitive disadvantage against companies from
countries such as France, which once considered bribes a tax-deductible
business expense. Andre Tarallo, a former executive with the French
state-owned oil giant, Elf Aquitaine, which merged with TotalFina
to form TotalFinaElf in 2000, testified in July 2001 before French
prosecutors that Elf Aquitaine had skimmed pennies off every barrel
of African oil since the 1970s to maintain secret slush funds
in Liechtenstein and Switzerland for payouts to African leaders.
The beneficiaries included heads of state from Gabon, Congo-Brazzaville,
Cameroon, Nigeria and Angola.
The FCPA does contain some significant
loopholes, such as the exemption for "facilitating payments,"
defined as "payments to facilitate or expedite performance
of routine governmental actions." These actions include processing
of permits, licenses or visas, but "do not include any decision
by a foreign official to award new business." Yet, according
to Phillip Urofsky, an attorney at the U.S. Justice Department
the agency charged with criminal enforcement of the act
the exemption also covers one of the most nebulous transactions
in the oil business, the signature bonus.
Signature bonuses are lump sums companies
pay foreign governments upon signing a contract licensing them
to explore and pump oil from a specified area, or "block."
The amount of the bonus varies according to the block's size and
prospective wealth. In recent years, the size of signature bonuses
has skyrocketed in hot markets such as Angola. The $870 million
bonus paid by BP-Amoco, TotalFinaElf and Exxon for the ultra-deepwater
blocks 31, 32 and 33 in 1999 set an industry record, and the $300
million signature bonus paid by four partner companies for block
34 kept the bar high. Among the largest transfers into Sonangol's
Jersey island accounts during the third quarter of 2000 was the
$13.7 million from Marathon Oil just one-third of the signature
bonus the company had agreed to pay for the opportunity to share
in Angola's oil wealth.
The amount of the bonuses are set in a
two-tiered bidding process: all of the companies selected by the
host government to share ownership of the block submit a "base
bid," the amount of which is widely known within the industry.
Companies then submit a second bid to determine the size of their
share, an amount that is tightly guarded. "It's far from
bribery it's a very normal practice around the world,"
said Knud Schlosser, vice president of Norsk Hydro, which holds
shares in four Angolan blocks. "It's a very clean business."
In his testimony before the French magistrates,
however, Elf's Tarallo used another term for the practice. "All
international oil companies have used kickbacks since the first
oil shock of the 1970s to guarantee the companies' access to oil,"
Tarallo said, according to news reports at the time. "You
have official 'bonuses' as part of a contract: the company seeking
to exploit an oil field commits itself to building a school, a
hospital or a road. Then you have 'parallel bonuses,' which can
be paid to increase the likelihood of obtaining the contract."
Another difficulty in determining the
"cleanliness" of the bonus system is that payments rarely
appear in corporate annual reports or financial filings. While
a few countries, such as Norway, require companies to detail their
accounts in a state registry, most do not. In the United States,
the most detailed financial information a publicly traded oil
company must release to the public appears in its shareholder
reports. Companies may break down expenditures in annual reports
by region, but provide little detail beyond that. For example,
the 1998 annual report for Chevron said only that the U.S. oil
company spent $87 million on property acquisition, $329 million
on exploration and $584 million on development in Africa in 1998.
The industry publication Offshore said Chevron had spent $400
million in 1998 on developing a deep-water oil field off the coast
of Angola, but whether that figure was included in the company's
development total was unclear.
As long as oil companies keep the size
of the signature bonuses they pay a secret, the potential for
diversion from Angola's budget is huge. Only half of the $870
million signature bonus for blocks 31-33 appeared on government
ledgers, and Angola's former Foreign Minister Venancio de Moura
acknowledged in December 1998 that the funds were earmarked for
the "war effort." Some economic reports have estimated
the amount of oil revenue missing from Angola's 2000 budget at
$1 billion a sobering figure considering that the bulk of
Angola's budget is funded by oil and that the country is expected
to receive some $23 billion worth of investment in its oil and
natural gas sectors by 2007.
Transparency advocates such as Global
Witness say oil companies must assume responsibility for their
contribution to corruption by releasing details of their payments
to foreign governments to the public. Such challenges, combined
with public relations debacles such as that of Shell in Nigeria,
have resulted in projects like the United Nations' Global Compact,
in which several oil and mining companies, including British Petroleum
(BP) and Shell, agreed to a set of principles intended to safeguard
human rights while protecting employees and property in remote
parts of the world. Chevron, Shell, Texaco, U.S. company Occidental
Petroleum and Norway's Statoil have all signed the Sullivan Principles,
based on a 1977 code of conduct authored by American minister
and activist Leon Sullivan for companies operating in South Africa,
which declare signatories' intent to "not offer, pay or accept
bribes."
Yet adopting a code of ethics doesn't
guarantee it will be followed. "Let us be realistic,"
Ho Wang Kim, the Angola officer at Energy Africa, told ICIJ when
asked whether his company followed a code of ethics. "No
oil company seeking ventures in Africa practices a noble and transparent
code of ethics and principles [in order] to have a competitive
edge over its competitors."
'Just the Standard'
In October 2000, British Foreign Office
Minister Peter Hain convened a private meeting attended by representatives
of several of the largest oil companies active in Angola, including
BP, Exxon and Chevron, together with advocacy groups including
Global Witness and Transparency International. The purpose of
the meeting was to persuade oil companies to publish financial
data on their Angolan operations, which would allow Angolan citizens
to know how much money was being sucked away by government corruption.
Two months later, in February 2001, BP sent financial records,
disclosing a $111.7 million signature bonus the company paid to
Sonangol in 1999 for block 31 to Companies House, a British national
archive, in the name of furthering transparency. Since BP's 26
percent share was public knowledge, and contract language stated
that oil companies must carry Sonangol's stake, observers were
quickly able to calculate the total signature bonus paid by all
the partners in block 31 at $355 million. The company also announced
it would annually publish data on oil production as well as any
payments or taxes paid under its contracts with the Angolan government.
The announcement was met with applause
from human rights organizations, but a disparaging silence from
the oil industry, which refused to believe that BP could take
such a step without violating the terms of its contract. The sole
response was from BP's block 17 partner TotalFinaElf, which issued
a press release promising it had turned over "precise technical
and financial information" to the IMF and World Bank, but
would not release it publicly.
BP answered its critics by noting that
after poring over the contract, its attorneys had concluded that
the terms did not override a British law requiring companies to
report significant payments. "The financial information we
have already published did not breach the contract since it was
an obligation of U.K. law," said BP spokesman Toby Odone.
Of the 13 oil companies with major stakes
in Angola interviewed by ICIJ, all (with the exception of ExxonMobil,
Agip and Ranger, which refused comment) claimed that contract
confidentiality clauses prevented them from releasing any financial
information, and were unwilling to share any details, including
the confidentiality clause language, of their contracts. This
hesitancy may be partially explained by a Feb. 21, 2001, letter
to BP in which Vicente expressed Sonangol's position on the company's
decision. Headlined "Unauthorized Disclosure of Confidential
Information" and copied to several other oil companies, the
letter stated, "With great surprise and disbelief, we have
read in the press that your company has been disclosing information
about your petroleum activity in Angola, including strictly confidential
information. If this can be confirmed, then it is good reason
for applying the provisions of Article 40 of the PSA, i.e. termination.
Finally we strongly recommend our partners not to adopt similar
attitudes in the future."
Aside from the government's strong-arm
tactics and contract confidences, many company executives said
they would never release financial information for "proprietary"
reasons. "Oil companies generally don't publish what they
pay for permits," said TotalFinaElf spokesman Thomas Saunders.
"Whether it's the oil industry or any other industry, obviously
you wouldn't want your competitors to know what you pay. It's
not that we're against it, or that there's something to hide;
it's just the standard."
Companies also equated opening their books
with dictating to and potentially alienating other
governments, something they are loathe to do. "I think it's
unwise and unrealistic to assume that businesses can fulfill the
role that the international community has had difficulty accomplishing,"
said Geir Westgaard, a vice president of Statoil. "Our industry
has to be sensitive to accusations of being too political, of
meddling with governments there can be a whiff of neo-colonialism."
Agreed Texaco spokesman Andrew Norman: "We recognize that
we have a responsibility to the people of Angola, but when it
comes to government policy we feel very strongly that it's not
our role to suggest or [try to] influence national economic policy."
Yet scores of lobby documents, financial
records and testimony reviewed by ICIJ attest to the fact that
influencing national economic policy both in their own countries
and in the lands where they operate is as integral to an
oil company's function as drilling holes. In fact, of the 50 oil
companies ranked the world's largest on the basis of their oil
and gas reserves, production and sales, 23 of them maintain representatives
in Washington. More than half of those companies are based in
other countries, attesting to the impact they believe U.S. policy
can have in foreign lands. In addition to lobbying, the oil and
gas industry contributed $33.7 million to federal candidates and
political parties in the 2000 U.S. election cycle, according to
the Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks political campaign
contributions.
Documents filed under the U.S. Lobbying
Disclosure Act between 1996 and 2001 demonstrate the importance
oil companies give to foreign issues. Before its merger in 1999
with BP, the list of foreign issues that U.S. company Amoco regularly
lobbied on surpassed energy or even environmental issues, normally
the first priority of petroleum companies. For example, in 1998
Amoco lobbied on U.S. relations with Africa, Nigeria, Angola,
Azerbaijan, China, Colombia, Romania, Venezuela, Algeria, Argentina,
Bolivia, Brazil, Mexico, Trinidad and Tobago, Russia, Kazakhstan,
Turkmenistan, Iran and Georgia. It also lobbied on legislation
including the Silk Road Strategy Act, European Energy Charter
and the Free Trade Act of the Americas, as well as annual foreign
appropriations bills.
Sanctions have been a longtime focus of
aggressive lobbying by the petroleum industry, an ardent foe of
any legislation that blocks investment and operation in other
countries. Chevron, Texaco, Conoco, Phillips and Mobil all lobbied
in support of the Enhancement of Trade Through Sanctions Act of
1998 and the Sanctions Policy Reform Act of 1999, which would
have limited and modified international sanctions. (ExxonMobil
simply listed the issue as "unilateral sanctions").
Most companies lobbied against the Iran and Libya Sanctions Act,
however; even the Italian company Eni and Australian company BHP
lobbied the U.S. Congress over sanctions against Iraq, Iran and
Libya.
Africa garners a large amount of attention
from lobbyists. Texaco has lobbied on "foreign trade and
investment in Angola and Nigeria;" ExxonMobil on the "Chad/Cameroon
development project;" Shell on "issues related to Nigeria
and southern Africa;" Conoco on "U.S. policy toward
Nigeria;" Phillips on "Angola/Nigeria transparency issues;"
BP on "improved U.S.-Angola relations," and several
companies on the Nigeria Democracy Act of 1998.
Perhaps the most significant African trade
bill passed by the U.S. Congress in the last several years is
the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOB). The petroleum industry
put all its muscle behind the bill, which aimed to enhance trade
between the U.S. and sub-Saharan Africa by negotiating free-trade
areas and reducing tariffs. AGOA met with significant opposition
upon its introduction in 1996 for, among other things, conditioning
trade benefits on economic reforms like privatization, while neglecting
issues like debt relief and the environment. However, a special-interest
group called the "Africa Growth and Opportunity Act Coalition
Inc." was formed to lobby for the bill in Congress by some
45 corporations, including Chevron and Texaco, and lobby shops
such as Cohen and Woods and C/R International (both of whom represent
countries that would benefit from the bill). Articles in oil industry
trade papers said the bill would create windfalls for oil companies
already in Africa by shrinking the price of oil on the U.S. market
and saving companies taxes. The bill was signed into law by then-President
Bill Clinton in May 2000 and expanded by Congress in 2001. Oil
executives argue that directly influencing a sovereign government
and lobbying on U.S. foreign policy are two separate things: however,
policies such as sanctions and trade agreements can shape nations
and even regions just as effectively as formal diplomacy.
"Influencing or subverting a government
is much more tiresome and risky than lobbying Congress to create
incentives," says William Reno, an Africa scholar at Northwestern
University in Illinois. "You're shaping the world that African
countries live in based on an ideological assumption that increased
trade brings capacity and order, though not particularly transparency.
I would question that assumption in states where institutions
are weak and governments pursue goals at the expense of these
institutions: adding resources (to them) can further empower the
wrong things."
The oil industry is also a major recruiter
of government officials who defect to the private sector. Perhaps
the ultimate example is the Houston-based Halliburton Company's
decision to hire the current U.S. vice president as CEO in 1996.
Halliburton, the world's largest provider of oil services, has
worked in some capacity on nearly every major oil concession in
Angola for the past 17 years. Cheney has served three U.S. presidents
prior to becoming vice president to George W. Bush, he was
defense secretary under Bush's father, former President George
Bush, and chief of staff under President Gerald Ford. During his
tenure, Cheney helped boost the company's annual profits to $15
billion, doubling its contracts with the Defense Department he
once oversaw to $657 million in 1999. Halliburton's campaign contributions
also increased 43 percent under Cheney, an outspoken critic of
sanctions. When he was CEO of Halliburton, the company lobbied
against sanctions in Sudan, Syria, Iran, Libya, Burma, Nigeria,
India and Pakistan. Cheney also quadrupled the amount of government
financing Halliburton received from the U.S. Export-Import Bank,
the agency tasked with finding new markets for U.S. companies.
Vital Interests
On Feb. 26, 2002, Angola's President Dos
Santos and an entourage of government ministers descended on the
downtown Washington Monarch Hotel for a dinner in his honor organized
by the Corporate Council on Africa business group and sponsored
by BP, ChevronTexaco, ExxonMobil and Ocean Energy. The crowd included
executives from more than 20 companies, along with Assistant Secretary
of State for Africa Walter Kantsteiner, Assistant U.S. Trade Representative
for Africa Rosa Whittaker and American diamond magnate Maurice
Tempelsman.
The event, which kicked off a three-day
visit with Bush administration officials and oil executives, occurred
four days after UNITA leader and Dos Santos nemesis Jonas Savimbi
was killed in a skirmish with Angolan government forces. Though
diners whispered that Secretary of State Colin Powell had warned
Dos Santos that his last excuse for funneling money away from
the civil sector was now gone, the warmth of the reception demonstrated
that the diplomatic and corporate worlds were willing to embrace
him in exchange for stability.
West African oil has always had its boosters,
generally confined in the past to a group of congressmen who supported
increased African trade and investment across the board. But since
Sept. 11, calls for increased attention to the region have found
new resonance. On June 20, 2002, the House of Representatives'
Committee on International Relations held a hearing on "oil
diplomacy," at which speakers, including Energy Secretary
Spencer Abraham and energy industry analyst Daniel Yergin, echoed
each others' calls to reduce U.S. dependency on politically volatile
oil producers and strengthen relationships with non-OPEC countries.
One week earlier, an ad-hoc group called the African Oil Policy
Initiative Group, drawn from the worlds of government, academia,
think tanks and business, released a report that advocated declaring
the Gulf of Guinea an area of "vital interest" to the
United States, installing U.S. military sub-commands in the region,
and conditioning debt relief on energy sector development, among
other recommendations.
New to the debate, however, was the mention
of transparency as a concern. "Expectations around the world
are changing, and old practices are becoming harder to sustain.
Transparency is increasingly being called for," said Rep.
Ed Royce, chairman of the House Committee on International Relations'
Subcommittee on Africa. "The practice of turning a blind
eye as oil revenues are misused is not good for Africans, and
ultimately it's bad business for oil companies. If done right,
the development of Africa's energy resources will improve our
nation's security, benefit our economy, and help lift African
economies."
It remains to be seen whether oil companies
and the U.S. government adhere to the philosophy of
transparency as the Dos Santos regime solicits more money to rebuild
post-war Angola and counter spreading famine. The United Nations
is trying to raise some $200 million in assistance, but donors
have been reluctant to give since the war's end theoretically
freed up Angola's oil revenues. A September aid pledge of $120
million from the World Bank was accompanied by a caveat that Angola
further open its books. Though there are signs of progress
the Angolan Finance Ministry in summer 2002 posted sales on its
Web site showing oil production and value figures in 2001
economists say the move is only one small step toward true transparency.
Meanwhile, the rush toward African oil
has only picked up speed: U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell
toured Angola and Gabon in September, breaking ground on a new
U.S. embassy in Luanda, and Bush welcomed several African heads
of state to the United States in September 2002.
Making
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