Warnings of Grave Climate and Human Rights Impact as US Export-Import Bank Approves $5 Billion for Natural Gas Project in Mozambique
Environmentalists reacted with outrage after the U.S. Export-Import Bank’s board of directors on Thursday approved $5 billion in funding for a liquefied natural gas plant in Mozambique that could pump an estimated 5.2 million tons of planet-warming carbon dioxide into the atmosphere each year.
Doug Norlen, director of the economic policy program at Friends of the Earth, called EXIM’s decision “irresponsible” and said it “proves the agency can’t be trusted to manage billions of dollars in public funds.”
“It makes one worry about Mozambique’s future. Investment from the U.S. will only amplify all of the troubles and conflicts in Mozambique caused by this project and push them out of control.”
—Daniel Ribeiro, Friends of the Earth Mozambique
“By approving $5 billion in fossil fuel financing, EXIM is accelerating the climate crisis while causing local environmental damage and propelling human rights violations in Mozambique,” Norlen said in a statement. “Either EXIM financing for fossil fuels must be stopped or the agency should not be reauthorized by Congress.”
Climate groups have repeatedly raised alarm over the bank’s funding of fossil fuel projects and demanded fundamental reforms.
According to Reuters, the Mozambique natural gas plant is the agency’s largest export deal in years.
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