Will $14 Billion in Oil Revenues be Used to Fund Corruption?
COP 29 Meeting in Azerbaijan Highlights History of Corruption, Disclosures Provide New Data on Oil Revenue Flows
COP 29 Meeting in Azerbaijan Highlights History of Corruption, Disclosures Provide New Data on Oil Revenue Flows
The President’s visit to the oil-producing nation comes on the heels of revealing disclosures from U.S. oil, gas, and mining companies.
In 2014, Niger announced it had successfully renegotiated uranium extraction contracts with French state-owned company Areva to secure a greater share of the wealth deriving from their uranium resources. Three years later, an analysis carried out by Oxfam based on data released by Areva calls into question the benefits for Niger in the contract renegotiation.This analysis was carried out as…
In 2014, Niger announced it had successfully renegotiated uranium extraction contracts with French state-owned company Areva to secure a greater share of the wealth deriving from their uranium resources. Three years later, an analysis carried out by Oxfam based on data released by Areva calls into question the benefits for Niger in the contract renegotiation. This analysis was carried out…
The following excerpt is from an article that was published on the Publish What You Pay International Secretariat site on August 31, 2017. Read the full post. Advocacy backed by data In November, Mukasri Sibanda traveled to Jakarta to join the inaugural ranks of our “Data Extractors” — individual members trained in the technical art of identifying, obtaining and analysing…
PWYP-US Extract-A-Fact Newsletter August 2017 A Guide to Navigating Canada’s New Oil, Gas, and Mining Disclosures The hundreds of ESTMA reports include disclosures from Chinese state-owned firm CNOOC on Canadian and global operations, ExxonMobil on operations within Canada, and Chevron on operations in Canada and Nigeria. This post will show you step-by-step how to access those reports. Read more… This…
The Publish What You Pay International Secretariat has published a new case study as part of its Data Extractors Program. Data Extractor and Director of the PWYP-US coalition, Jana Morgan, explores whether the United States is receiving a good deal on the extraction of its natural resources. Read the full case study on the Publish What You Pay International Secretariat…
The following case study is part of the Publish What You Pay International Secretariat’sData Extractors program, a global initiative that trains Publish What You Pay members and activists around the world to put extractives data to use to fight for a more open and accountable natural resource sector. Is the United States getting a good deal on its natural resources?…
By Joseph Williams, Natural Resource Governance Institute This post originally appeared on www.resourcegovernance.org on June 13, 2017 Statoil became the first companyto report under a mandatory payment disclosure regime in early 2015, undermining U.S. oil lobby arguments. Shell, which had fought so vigorously against project-level payment disclosure laws, published its first payments to governments report under U.K. law in April…
Hundreds of oil, gas and mining companies have now reported their payments to governments, as required by the Canadian Extractive Sector Transparency Measures Act (ESTMA). Citizens now have access to a massive pool of previously hidden payment data that can help fuel their efforts to hold governments and companies accountable for how their natural resources are managed. The hundreds of…