Welcome to ECA Watch

Export credit agences provide government-backed loans, guarantees and insurance to corporations working internationally in some of the most volatile, controversial and damaging industries on the planet.

Shrouded in mystery, ECAs provide financial backing for risky projects that might never otherwise get off the ground. They are a major source of national debt in developing countries.

ECA Watch is a network of NGOs from around the world. We come together to campaign for ECA reform - better transparency, accountability, and respect for environmental standards and human rights.

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What's New February 2021

What's New!" is a periodic update to keep you informed of the latest on the ECA Watch website. What's New! features a wide range of materials related to the reform of Export Credit Agencies (ECAs) including NGO publications and releases, news articles, commentaries and announcements about the policies and practices of ECAs and ECA-financed projects world-wide.

If you would like to receive "What's New!" simply add your e-mail to the ECA-Action list at www.eca-watch.org today! Questions?

Email info-at-eca-watch.org

See all "What's New!" updates since 2005 here.

  • US to end int'l financing for fossil fuel projects - but how?
  • USDA farm export credits to go now to climate change
  • China's Global Energy Finance Database
  • U.K. Firms Get Pandemic Support From Agency With Great War Roots
  • COVID-19 State Aid - The EU opens the door to additional support
  • UKEF may back Brazilian oil and gas project despite promised end to fossil fuel funding
  • Groundbreaking research reveals the financiers of the coal industry
  • Is new thinking needed on export finance regulation?
  • ICC rolls out ambitious new export finance sustainability initiative
  • ECAs and the once elusive SME
  • Mota-Engil Begins Work on ECA supported $1.8 Billion Nigeria-Niger Railway
  • Airbus cautious on 2021 hoping for ECA backed backed cash flow
  • Africa's COVID-19 vaccine financing gap opens opportunities for China, Russia

US to end int'l financing for fossil fuel projects - but how?

(Reuters, Barcelona, 27 January 2021) The United States will produce a plan to end international financing for fossil fuel projects, its special climate envoy John Kerry said Wednesday, as senior British and U.N. officials urged donor nations to meet a flagship climate finance promise. Speaking at an online panel organised by the World Economic Forum, Kerry said the new administration of U.S. President Joe Biden would draft a plan for U.S. climate finance, without giving further details. He noted the United States had spent $265 billion cleaning up three major hurricanes that hit the country in 2017, while another storm in 2020 racked up a bill of $55 billion. Yet “in stark contrast, we don’t fully fund” a commitment by wealthy governments, enshrined in the Paris Agreement, to raise $100 billion a year globally to help poor, vulnerable nations adopt clean energy and adapt to extreme weather and rising seas, he said.  Friends of the Earth noted that in the past two years the U.S. Export-Import Bank (EXIM) approved over $5 billion for fossil fuel projects abroad.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-climate-change-finance-usa-trfn-idUSKBN29W2V1


USDA farm export credits to go now to climate change

(Yahoo News, Washington, 31 January 2021) The Trump administration used the USDA Commodity Credit Corp. to bail out farmers suffering from its trade wars. Now the Biden administration wants to deploy a $30 billion pot of money in the Agriculture Department to tackle climate change, support restaurants and kickstart other programs without waiting for Congress. Long hidden in obscurity as a Depression-era financial institution, the Commodity Credit Corp. is used to fund certain conservation programs, foreign market development, export credit and commodity purchases. The billions paid out to farmers far eclipsed the massive 2008 auto bailout, and accounted for 40 percent of farm income in 2020.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/30b-fund-sitting-inside-usda-115016514.html


China's Global Energy Finance Database

(Global Development Policy Center, Boston, 12 February 2021) In 2020, China’s two development banks with global operations — the China Development Bank (CDB) and the Export-Import Bank of China (CHEXIM) — recorded $4.6 billion of overseas energy sector finance. This represents a decrease of 43%, from the $8.1 billion in lending to foreign countries recorded in 2019. The China’s Global Energy Finance Database is an interactive data project that exhibits financing for global energy projects by China’s two global policy banks—the China Development Bank (CDB) and the Export-Import Bank of China (CHEXIM).

http://www.bu.edu/cgef/#/intro


U.K. Firms Get Pandemic Support From Agency With Great War Roots

(Bloomberg, London, 26 February 2021) U.K. companies pummeled for nearly a year by pandemic shutdowns are turning to a century-old government agency with roots in the country’s drive to rebuild trade after the Great War to help them raise funds. Subsea 7 Ltd. on Thursday sealed a $500 million loan guaranteed by UKEF. The oilfield services company, and airlines British Airways Plc and EasyJet Plc, are among 5 firms that have secured a combined 6.3 billion pounds ($8.93 billion) of funding with UKEF support since the pandemic began. Alongside massive fiscal stimulus, export financing aid is another device in the government’s toolbox to help companies ride out a slump that caused the British economy to shrink about 10% in 2020.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-02-26/u-k-firms-get-pandemic-suppor...


COVID-19 State Aid - The EU opens the door to additional support

(Byrne Wallace, Dublin, 3 February 2021) The European Commission has broadened the scope of its COVID-19 State aid Temporary Framework Communication by more than doubling the level of support that Member States can provide to many individual businesses suffering as a result of COVID-19. It has also extended the period of validity for the Temporary Framework by a further 6 months to the end of December 2021.This is the fifth (and almost certainly the most significant) amendment to the Temporary Framework since it was introduced by the Commission in spring 2020 in response to the COVID-19 outbreak. The purpose of the Temporary Framework is to loosen the State aid rules applicable to Member States in light of COVID-19 in providing financial assistance to their economies, by imposing fewer restrictions on the aid amounts and eligible costs that can be provided to businesses. Support can be provided through a number of methods under the Temporary Framework including direct grants, State guarantees, subsidised public loans, safeguards for banks lending to SMEs, and short-term export credit insurance. Every EU Member State has notified at least 4 measures, with a total of over 325 notifications having been made in the less than 10 months the Temporary Framework has existed. Sixty-five of these measures have had budgets of over €1 billion, including three French measures mobilising €300 billion of liquidity support for companies, a £50 billion UK “umbrella” scheme, a €44 billion Italian recapitalisation scheme to support large companies, and a German fund of up to €500 billion of liquidity and capital support.

https://byrnewallace.com/news-and-recent-work/publications/covid-19-state-aid-th...


UKEF may back Brazilian oil and gas project despite promised end to fossil fuel funding

(The Telegraph, London, 6 February 2021) The Government promised last year to end taxpayer support for fossil fuel projects overseas. The UK is poised to back a major Brazilian offshore oil project that will contribute the same emissions as 800,000 cars annually, despite its promise to end funding for overseas oil and gas projects.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/environment/2021/02/06/major-brazilian-oil-gas-proje...


Groundbreaking research reveals the financiers of the coal industry

(Urgewald & Reclaim Finance, Berlin, 24 February 2021) urgewald, Reclaim Finance, Rainforest Action Network, 350.org Japan and 25 further NGO partners have published groundbreaking research on the financiers and investors behind the global coal industry. It was found that in January 2021, 4,488 institutional investors held investments totaling USD 1.03 trillion in companies operating along the thermal coal value chain. The top commercial bank lenders to the coal industry are Mizuho, SMBC, MUFG, Citigroup and Barclays. Scandinavian banks poured $67 billion into the fossil fuel industry since Paris. The Rainforest Action Network notes that while "welcom(ing) President Biden’s Executive Order to end public financing for fossil fuels abroad, the new administration must also address the role of Wall Street as a huge driver of climate pollution around the world - driving us ever deeper into a climate crisis".
 

https://www.banktrack.org/article/groundbreaking_research_reveals_the_financiers...


Is new thinking needed on export finance regulation?

(TFX News, New York, 3 February 2021) The OECD Consensus has a long history but it’s still the only game in town. With the International Working Group now in stasis, is that a problem, or is it going to focus minds on reform? The ‘Arrangement on Officially Supported Export Credits’ started out in 1978 building on the export credit ‘Consensus’ among a number of OECD countries in 1976 as a way of getting the world’s major exporting nations, in those days, the OECD countries, to agree on a level playing field for fair competition and, in the process, to rein in the huge export finance subsidies which were beginning to seem unsustainable even to the richest of them. The biggest pressures have been coming from outside the Consensus’s OECD core. Countries once indisputably not rich (e.g. China, India, Brazil, Russia and South Africa) moved from being exporters of primary goods and importers of capital goods to the opposite. Not all, but the size of the emerging exporting nations (China the biggest of them all) meant that their non-adherence to the OECD’s Consensus club created a need for a new forum. The International Working Group on Export Credits (IWG), was established in 2012 with the aim of trying to bridge the gap between them and the Consensus Participants. In November 2020, IWG technical groups were formally suspended for a year by 11 of the 18 countries (including the EU) due to the [Covid] freeze on IWG technical work. A new Secretary General has neither been so far agreed nor announced. The Arrangement has long had Sector Understandings, mini-‘Gentlemen’s Agreements’. At the moment, they cover aircraft, ships and trains plus energy and the environment (nuclear power, renewable energy, climate change mitigation and adaptation, and water projects, and coal-fired electricity). Time for new thinking is ahead. Like coral reefs, [10,000 years in development, quickly destroyed], the Arrangement is delicate, subject to abuse, but very valuable in parts to the world economy.

https://www.txfnews.com/News/Article/7118/Consensus-still-standing-Or-is-new-thi...


ICC rolls out ambitious new export finance sustainability initiative

(TXF News, London, 1 December 2020) The International Chamber of Commerce Global Export Finance Committee’s Sustainability Working Group (ICC-SWG) is out to market with an ambitious initiative: to engage the export finance community in a discourse on how the industry aims to fulfil the UN’s sustainable development agenda, in a bid to develop both ECA policy and product.  The ICC-SWG, comprising 16 of the most active ECA banks (including a handful of global heads) and the Rockefeller Foundation - has invited industry players to have their say on how banks and ECAs can better align their SDGs within the export finance solution. A white paper, convened by the ICC and expected to be published in June 2021, will review the state of sustainable finance across the export finance landscape and propose both product and policy recommendations aimed at boosting the flow of export credits towards greater sustainable activity.

https://www.txfnews.com/News/Article/7092/Exclusive-ICC-rolls-out-ambitious-new-...


ECAs and the once elusive SME

(TFX News, New York, 25 February 2021) What has Covid meant for ECAs and their ability to attract smaller companies? How are ECAs responding to the needs of these new clients and how are they broadening their financing partners? Once the pandemic imperative is over, will those smaller businesses be back for more? TXF talks to four ECAs [Sweden, Denmark, UK & USA] about their experience with SMEs – and finds out things may have changed for good. It’s long been on the wish list of export credit agencies to engage a broader range of corporates to provide export support. For whatever reason ... diversifying that ECA client base to help smaller companies’ exports has been a ‘nice to do’, and a bit of a struggle, rather than an imperative – until last year when the SME no longer seemed elusive. Towards the end of the summer, government attentions turned towards developing an SME product range for post-pandemic support for recovery. In July, UKEF launched its Export Development Guarantee programme which focused on larger corporates (for instance, Ford took up a £500 million facility focused on capital investment to support export growth). More recently, in December, however, UKEF announced its General Export Facility (GEF) for SMEs and corporates. [Is this a move to reduce the critique of ECAs as subsidizers of transnational corporations - the banks of Boeing? Or a desperate measure to stave off the Covid collapse of small business jobs?]

https://www.txfnews.com/News/Article/7129/ECAs-and-the-once-elusive-SME-Hunting-...


Mota-Engil Begins Work on ECA supported $1.8 Billion Nigeria-Niger Railway

(Bloomberg, New York, 9 February 2021) Mota-Engil’s local unit is a joint venture with Shoreline Group, an independent Nigerian oil producer. The nearly $2 billion of financing required for the rail line will be sourced from Europe, Credit Suisse Group AG, Africa Finance Corp. and German state bank KfW are finalizing loans from export credit agencies, multilateral institutions and commercial banks. Mota-Engil SGPS SA, a Portuguese construction company, started work on the $1.8 billion railway line that will connect Nigeria with neighbor Niger. Critics have questioned the commercial viability of the Kano-Maradi line, particularly the priority given to a link to Niger at a time when government revenue is scarce. Niger, with a GDP about one-fortieth the size of its larger neighbor, exported goods worth an estimated $1.54 billion last year, according to the International Monetary Fund. While the Mota-Engil group is based in Portugal, the company was originally founded in Angola in 1946. The firm has previously built or refurbished railways in countries including Malawi, Mozambique and Tanzania, and recently announced other construction contracts in Ghana, South Africa and the Ivory Coast. Mota-Engil agreed in November to sell a minority stake in the company to state-controlled China Communications Construction Corp.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-02-09/mota-engil-starts-building-1-...


Airbus cautious on 2021 hoping for ECA backed backed cash flow

(Bloomberg, New York, 18 February 2021) Airbus SE generated 4.9 billion euros ($5.9 billion) in cash during the fourth quarter, while issuing cautious guidance on the pace of its recovery from aviation’s worst-ever crisis. Jet handovers are forecast to stay at 2020’s depressed levels this year, even as Airbus plans to ramp up production in the second half. In the meantime, airlines’ shaky finances will ripple back to Airbus. The planemaker’s cash flows will feel the impact from lower pre-delivery payments from customers, as well as a greater requirement to help finance plane purchases. The company may be required to finance 1 billion euros or more for its customers, though it hopes export credit programs will help to fill the gap.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-02-18/airbus-cautious-on-2021-after...


Africa's COVID-19 vaccine financing gap opens opportunities for China, Russia

(S&P Global, New York, 4 February 2021) Since Feb. 1, Britain and other high-income countries such as Israel and the United Arab Emirates have continued their vaccination programs apace, while even relatively rich African countries such as South Africa continue to lag. This stark divide in access to vaccines to combat the pandemic underscores structural problems in the developing world, and in Africa in particular, where there are significant barriers to financing the procurement of life-saving inoculations. Shortfalls in both funding and supply are also creating opportunities for China and Russia to export their vaccines to Africa as they seek to strengthen commercial and political relations with the continent. Multilateral development financial institutions such as the World Bank and the African Development Bank will be crucial to bridging the financing gap. National export credit agencies that offer government backed-financing for companies' international activities will also need a boost. China and Russia see 'real opportunity'... and "are likely to fill the gaps in Africa by providing vaccines at favorable pricing or as donations, said Pangea-Risk's Besseling. "They are seeing a real opportunity to extend their commercial, diplomatic, political and geopolitical security relations with the African continent," he said.

https://www.spglobal.com/marketintelligence/en/news-insights/latest-news-headlin...


What's New January 2021

What's New!" is a periodic update to keep you informed of the latest on the ECA Watch website. What's New! features a wide range of materials related to the reform of Export Credit Agencies (ECAs) including NGO publications and releases, news articles, commentaries and announcements about the policies and practices of ECAs and ECA-financed projects world-wide.

If you would like to receive "What's New!" simply add your e-mail to the ECA-Action list at www.eca-watch.org today! Questions?

Email info-at-eca-watch.org

See all "What's New!" updates since 2005 here.

  • Atradius DSB launches 'Green Label' to promote greater environmentally responsible export transactions
  • EDC is undermining Canada’s climate commitments. Will Ottawa step in and take action?
  • NGOs Strongly Oppose JBIC Decision to Support Vietnamiese Coal-fired Power Generation Project
  • Asian ECAs sustain coal’s threat to world climate
  • EU greenlights more short-term ECA state aid for virus-hit firms and agriculture
  • Turkish ECA finances US$70 million Kenyan armored car deal
  • Departing EXIM chief urges Biden team to counter Chinese lending dominance
  • Australian ECA may finance buyer for Pacific mobile network Digicel to block China
  • British Airways & EasyJet: UK Export Finance's new form of state aid
  • US Exim and Greensill back domestic LNG exporter
  • UAE - India to enhance trade, economic cooperation
  • U.S. ExIm prepares possible seizure of Bulgarian satellite over loan nonpayment
  • Ukraine aims to develop cooperation with OECD ECAs

Atradius DSB launches 'Green Label' to promote greater environmentally responsible export transactions

(Both ENDS, Amsterdam, 29 January 2021). Atradius Dutch State Business (ADSB) recently launched the so-called “Green Label”. This is a methodology to determine whether a transaction can be qualified as a green transaction. Such green transactions are eligible for export credit insurance with specific, more attractive terms and conditions:

  • Cover for up to 95% – in stead of the usual 70-90% – of the total value of project finance transactions;
  • Flexible acceptance criteria for small green transactions up to €5 million;
  •  Flexible definition of export, allowing cover for domestic transactions that have export potential in the long run.

The green label is also meant to be a tool to determine the share of green transactions in ADSB’s overall portfolio. Starting from 2019, ADSB annually reports on this.

Aligning itself with the International Finance Corporation (IFC) and the Netherlands Finance Corporation for Developing Countries (FMO), ADSB reviews whether transactions contribute to:
    a) reduction of climate change (mitigation); or
    b) adaptation to the impacts of climate change; or
    c) reduction of ecological footprint beyond local legal requirements.
The Green Label distinguishes 11 categories of ‘green’ business, which in their turn have a total of 36 sub-categories. In an Annex to the document an overview – Green List – is provided of various types of business within each of these categories.

Depending on the intensity of the contributions of transactions to the environment or climate, they are identified as dark green, middle green or light green, but that does not affect their eligibility for the specific favourable terms and conditions for green transactions. The current Green Label will be valid for one year (to December 2021) and evaluated thereafter to ensure it incorporates further insights and developments.

It is observed that the Green Label aligns well with the EU taxonomy. However it is also noted that there can be differences between the two since the EU taxonomy is valid only for transactions within the EU, while ECA backed transactions are usually located outside the EU.

Both ENDS notes that this distinction between standards within the EU being different from the standards that ECAs may observe abroad is problematic, particularly where it relates to values and concerns that are universal. This is clearly the case where we need to address issues such as climate change, environmental standards or human rights.

Overall Both ENDS welcomes the Green Label as an effort to open up for further dialogue on the green qualifications of specific transactions. Many CSOs might question - for example - whether hydro dams for electricity, biomass, refurbishing thermal power plants or industrial farming should qualify for the label green, or instead a brown label.

Equally, we hope ADSB and other ECAs will prioritize effective instruments to put an end to support for transactions with obvious negative environmental and climate impacts, such as  transactions supporting the exploration and production chains of all fossil fuels. Following recent announcements by the UK government and the new Biden administration in the USA to phase out public support for fossil fuels, it becomes high time for all ECAs to follow suit.

https://atradiusdutchstatebusiness.nl/nl/documenten/the_green_label_eng.pdf


EDC is undermining Canada’s climate commitments. Will Ottawa step in and take action?

(Above Ground, Ottawa, 13 January 2021) Between 2016 and 2018, Canada provided more public finance for fossil fuels than any G20 country other than China, with Export Development Canada (EDC) providing on average $13.8 billion in support to oil and gas companies each year. Last month more than 50 civil society organizations joined us in calling for Ottawa to cut off this enormous flow of public financial support to an industry fuelling the climate crisis. Our letter to the trade minister urges the government to immediately end EDC’s support for all fossil fuels and to scale up its support for sustainable, renewable and equitable climate solutions that respect human rights. Find out more about EDC’s support to fossil fuel producers in our fact sheet.

https://aboveground.ngo/edc-fossil-finance-will-ottawa-step-in/


NGOs Strongly Oppose JBIC Decision to Support Vietnamiese Coal-fired Power Generation Project

(FOE Japan, Tokyo, 29 January 2021) JBIC, a public financial institution, announced it's decision on December 28 to provide project financing of up to US $636 million to the Vung Ang 2 coal-fired power generation project in Vietnam. The private-sector financial institutions participating in the cofinancing are believed to include Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, MUFG Bank, Mizuho Bank and Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank. Vung Ang 2 has been criticized internationally, and many problems with the project have been pointed out. The signatory NGOs strongly oppose JBIC's decision to support the project and its failure to be accountable or  address many criticisms, which include the project’s inconsistency with climate change measures and inadequate environmental impact assessments. The project was originally to be sponsored by Hong Kong-based CLP Holdings together with Mitsubishi Corporation, but CLP announced its coal phase-out policy in December 2019 and decided to withdraw from the project. Standard Chartered Bank of the UK, OCBC Bank and DBS Bank of Singapore, all of which had been considering financing, also withdrew from the project. General Electric, which was expected to participate in the project announced on September 21 2020 that it would “exit the new build coal power market”. In addition to JIBC, the Export-Import Bank of Korea (Kexim) and a group of private lenders, will provide nearly US$1.8bn in loans for the project.

https://www.foejapan.org/en/aid/jbic02/va/201229.html


Asian ECAs sustain coal’s threat to world climate

(New Statesman, London, 25 January 2021) The sun may be setting on coal-fired power in Europe and North America, but its persistence in Asia threatens global climate targets. Crucial to that darkening outlook is the growing difficulty that coal-fired power plants face in raising finance. Private sector banks, under pressure from investors and activists, have been gradually pulling back from lending to coal projects (although campaigners complain that their fossil fuel exclusion policies are often not tight enough). Instead, developers had looked to concessional finance from the Chinese, Japanese and South Korean governments, whose export credit agencies were happy to lend at attractive rates to projects that used turbines and other equipment supplied by their industrial giants. “[Approximately] 90 per cent of all coal-fired power plants built in Asia in the last five years were underpinned by export credit agency finance,” says Tim Buckley, director of energy finance studies at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA). All three of those countries are shutting their chequebooks, under pressure to act on climate change.  But the latest IEA data comes with a sting. The Paris-based agency, part of the OECD, forecasts a rebound in coal demand of 2.6% in 2021 as the global economy recovers. Global Energy Monitor data also shows a small increase in the coal power pipeline last year, as Chinese regional apparatchiks, chasing economic growth targets, waved through new project applications. 

https://www.newstatesman.com/business/sustainability/2021/01/how-coal-s-uneven-r...


EU greenlights more short-term ECA state aid for virus-hit firms and agriculture

(Reuters, Brussels, 28 January 2021) Reuters reports that EU competition regulators on 28 January extended looser state aid rules for virus-hit companies to the end of 2021, making it easier for EU governments to pump money into economies battered by the pandemic. This includes extension to the end of 2021 of the temporary removal of all countries from the list of “marketable risk” countries under its short-term export-credit insurance guidance because of the continued lack of sufficient private capacity to cover export risks.

https://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-stateaid/update-1-more-state-...


Turkish ECA finances US$70 million Kenyan armored car deal

(Defense News, Virginia, 29 January 2021) Kenya’s military has ordered 118 four-wheel drive personnel carriers from Turkish armored vehicles manufacturer Katmerciler. Kenya Defence Forces spokesperson Col. Zipporah Kioko told local press that the Ministry of Defence is finalizing the deal for the mine-resistant, ambush-protected Hizir vehicles through Turkey’s Export Credit Agency. Kenya’s military will primarily deploy the Hizir vehicles for counterterror operations against the al-Shabab militant group in Somolia. Reports have emerged of growing disquiet among Kenyan military ranks over the planned acquisition from the Turkish firm amid safety concerns. The vehicles, said to have fallen short of User Specifications Requirements (USR) set by the Kenya Army, were approved in a single sourcing deal by the Defense Procurement Board. Two other firms, one from South African and another from North America, were locked out of the multi-billion shillings deal, despite having more internationally accepted military vehicles.

https://www.defensenews.com/land/2021/01/27/kenya-orders-118-armored-vehicles-fr...


Departing EXIM chief urges Biden team to counter Chinese lending dominance

(Reuters, Washington, 18 January 2021) The head of the Export-Import Bank of the United States (EXIM) on Monday urged the Biden administration to keep pushing to neutralize Chinese export subsidies and help U.S. companies compete, building on gains made under Donald Trump. Chairman Kimberly Reed, a political appointee who will leave her job on Wednesday after 20 months in office, told Reuters she was confident that restoration of the bank’s full lending powers had strengthened the competitiveness of U.S. companies and helped level the playing field, but more work was needed.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trade-exim/departing-exim-chief-urges-bid...


Australian ECA may finance buyer for Pacific mobile network Digicel to block China

(Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 14 January 2021) China Mobile is firming as the most likely Chinese company to make a play for telecommunications assets in the Pacific in a move that would trouble Australia’s national security agencies. Digicel, owned by Irish billionaire Denis O’Brien, is under financial pressure and looking to offload its mobile phone networks across the region including in Papua New Guinea, Fiji, Tonga and Samoa. The Morrison government is considering using the nation’s export credit agency, Export Finance Australia, to provide support to other private bidders looking to acquire the assets. This could be in the form of subsidised loans or loan guarantees. Australian security agencies are concerned about the prospect of a Chinese telco gaining a foothold in the region and potentially spying on our close neighbours, government sources said. O'Brien is reportedly asking for more than $2 billion for the assets, but industry sources put the value at less than $1 billion.

https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/australia-may-finance-buyer-for-pacific-...


British Airways & EasyJet: UK Export Finance's new form of state aid

(Centre for Aviation, Sydney, 31 December 2020) On 31-Dec-2020 IAG announced that its subsidiary British Airways had received commitments for a GBP 2 billion five-year term loan facility underwritten by a syndicate of banks. On 8-Jan-2021 easyJet announced a GBP1.4 billion five year facility, also underwritten by a syndicate of banks. The unusual feature in both loans is that they are partially guaranteed by UK Export Finance (UKEF), an arm of the UK government. Such loan guarantees to UK exporters mark a strategic shift for the UK's export credit agency towards more direct support. In the past, its support has typically been indirect, through guarantees provided to foreign buyers of UK-produced goods and services, with direct support to UK exporters generally focused on smaller businesses. UKEF has long supported the UK aerospace sector's exports through credit guarantees and loans to foreign airlines buying from UK exporters.

https://centreforaviation.com/analysis/reports/british-airways--easyjet-uk-expor...


US Exim and Greensill back domestic LNG exporter

(Global Trade Review, London, 13 January 2021) The Export-Import Bank of the United States has signed off on a new supply chain finance loan guarantee that marks its first support of a domestic liquified natural gas (LNG) exporter. As part of the deal, US Exim will provide a 90% guarantee to cover a US$50mn SCF facility from Greensill Capital to Houston-based Freeport LNG Marketing. Freeport LNG’s chairman and CEO Michael Smith says the deal will provide the company with “essential working capital” and support its global export operations.

https://www.gtreview.com/news/americas/us-exim-and-greensill-back-lng-exporter-w...


UAE - India to enhance trade, economic cooperation

(MENAFN, Amman, 30 December 2020) Etihad Credit Insurance (ECI), the UAE Federal export credit company, has partnered with ECGC Limited (ECGC), the premier export credit agency of India, to explore and bolster the trade and economic cooperation between the UAE and India. India's ministry of external affairs in February 2020 reported that current trade between the two nations is valued at around $60 billion, making the UAE India's third-largest trading partner and second-largest export destination in 2018 to 2019.

https://menafn.com/1101360474/UAE-India-to-enhance-trade-economic-cooperation


U.S. ExIm prepares possible seizure of Bulgarian satellite over loan nonpayment

(SpaceIntel Report, Potomac, 11 January 2021) The U.S. Export-Import Bank is preparing a possible seizure of the Bulgaria Sat 1 telecommunications satellite, in orbit since 2017, following the owner’s inability to reimburse an Ex-Im loan of $150.5 million. The bank, which is the U.S. export-credit agency, has put out requests for candidates who would advise the bank on how to “maximize recovery on its loan by finding a strategic buyer of the company assets,” the bank said.

https://www.spaceintelreport.com/u-s-ex-im-bank-prepares-possible-seizure-of-bul...


Ukraine aims to develop cooperation with OECD ECAs

(Ukrinform, Kyiv, 27 January 2021) Ukraine intends to accede to the Arrangement on Officially Supported Export Credits and intensify cooperation in the export credit field; to cooperate in the area of management of state-owned enterprises and privatization; strengthen responsible business practices in the energy sector and develop the public procurement system. The state budget of Ukraine for 2021 provides for financing of the Export Credit Agency in the amount of up to UAH 1.8 billion (US$63.7 million) in preparation for the negotiation of a free-trade agreement with the Egypt, Jordan, Indonesia and China,

https://www.ukrinform.net/rubric-economy/3178850-ukraine-aims-to-develop-coopera...


What's New December 2020

What's New!" is a periodic update to keep you informed of the latest on the ECA Watch website. What's New! features a wide range of materials related to the reform of Export Credit Agencies (ECAs) including NGO publications and releases, news articles, commentaries and announcements about the policies and practices of ECAs and ECA-financed projects world-wide.

If you would like to receive "What's New!" simply add your e-mail to the ECA-Action list at www.eca-watch.org today! Questions?

Email info-at-eca-watch.org

See all "What's New!" updates since 2005 here.

  • UKEF to stop funding overseas fossil fuel projects?
  • EU Commission Approves €625 Million Italian Scheme to Counter COVID-19 Impacts
  • EXIM is helping American workers and keeping China at bay
  • Unions oppose EXIM relaxation of domestic content rules
  • Korea's Eximbank provides $500 mil. for Mozambique gas project
  • Too Many Eggs in the Dragon’s Basket? Part Two: Diversifying Australia’s Export Base
  • UK widens access to export loans as post-Brexit transition ends
  • UKEF concerned over ‘largely unused’ export credit facility
  • Ugandans question ECA supported EACOP pipeline vs energy transition
  • UAE, Israel export credit agencies sign trade cooperation deal
  • Ukrainian-UK Defense Cooperation: Will UKEF Have Kyiv’s Back?
  • Massive SACE loan from Italy to Egypt
  • Shipping lenders face carbon cutting shortfalls despite Poseidon Principles
  • Swedish ECAs propose $2-billion credit for aviation development in Vietnam
  • Norwegian Air secures court protection over €4.1bn debts
  • Hungarian & Russian ECAs sign $1.17 billion Egyptian rail deal
  • Russian Export Forum to focus on COVID-driven incentives for businesses
  • China, Japan, and S. Korea see $205 billion renewable energy market in Southeast Asia
  • Crisis response: a paradigm shift for ECAs

UKEF to stop funding overseas fossil fuel projects?

(Sydney Morning Herald, London, 12 December 2020) British taxpayers will stop subsidising overseas fossil fuel projects under a pledge by Prime Minister Boris Johnson which opens a new front in the push for more urgent international action on climate change. Johnson will announce the "world-leading policy" while opening a virtual climate summit on Sunday morning. The plan is yet to be finalised and a start date has not been settled, but Johnson will tell world leaders he will stop the government's export credit agency from providing finance or other support for the extraction, production, transportation and refining of crude oil, natural gas or thermal coal overseas. Green groups have accused the British government of "rank hypocrisy" for talking tough on climate change while still directing billions of pounds towards polluting projects abroad. In June, it promised nearly £900 million ($1.58 billion) in loans and bank guarantees to help build a huge liquefied natural gas project in Mozambique which will open up the country's vast gas reserves. Environmental campaigners are challenging the deal in court on the basis it is incompatible with the UK's Paris climate accord commitments. A third runway at London's Heathrow Airport was blocked by the courts in February because the mega infrastructure project did not take the UK's climate obligations into account. UN secretary-general António Guterres is pushing for all development finance institutions to halt fossil fuel financing ahead of a crucial international climate summit in Glasgow next November. [Meanwhile, as recently as December 2nd, UKEF revealed in response to a parliamentary question that it had been approached regarding finance for Uganda's EACOP pipeline, but that no decision has yet been made. The French, German and Italian ECAs are also reported to have been approached ($). While a welcome advance, we must remember that these measures have been promised for years with little progress to-date.]

https://www.smh.com.au/world/europe/uk-to-stop-funding-overseas-fossil-fuel-proj...


EU Commission Approves €625 Million Italian Scheme to Counter COVID-19 Impacts

(Schengenvisainfonews, Prishtina, 7 December 2020) Operators together and travel agencies in Italy affected by the Coronavirus outbreak will receive financial support to get out of the current economic crisis, as the European Union Commission has approved €625 million Italian scheme, under the State aid Temporary Framework. The European Commission concluded that the scheme notified by Italy completes the conditions set out by the Temporary Framework, significantly that aid will not surpass €800,000 per company; and it will be allocated by June 30, 2021. The Temporary Framework provides several types of aid, which can be granted by the Member States. The framework was amended, on April 3, May 8, June 29 as well as October 13, 2020, and includes, among other financial mechanisms, public short-term export credit insurance for all international countries, without the need for the Member State in question to show that the respective country is “non-marketable”.

https://www.schengenvisainfo.com/news/eu-commission-approves-e625-million-italia...


EXIM is helping American workers and keeping China at bay

(The Hill, Washington, 17 December 2020) [An example of political influences on EXIM vs the OECD's purely economic free market level playing field.] One year ago, under President Trump’s leadership, Congress came together across party lines to re-authorize EXIM, our nation’s export credit agency. As our great economic resurgence continues and American companies battle the setbacks caused by COVID-19, that decision looks even better. American companies and their workers face an unlevel playing field, where countries like China stack the deck. As just one part of the Chinese Communist Party’s multi-faceted Belt and Road initiative to achieve global dominance, its government offers vast amounts of export finance to incentivize foreign companies to purchase Chinese goods and services. The country’s export financing is estimated to equal 90% of what is provided by all G7 countries combined. While the number of export credit agencies like EXIM has grown to 115 around the world, up from 85 only four years ago, China’s expansive export and trade-related activity far exceeds that of other countries. The reauthorization law charges the agency with a goal of reserving no less than 20% of its total financing authority — $27 billion out of $135 billion — for support of U.S. exports to neutralize export credit or other subsidies provided by China or other covered countries.

https://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/politics/530609-one-year-after-reauthori...


Unions oppose EXIM relaxation of domestic content rules

(Market Screener, Annecy, 8 December 2020) EXIM, the U.S. export credit agency that is supposed to support U.S. jobs by financing exports of U.S.-made goods, is instead considering extreme proposals to destroy requirements that tie financing to domestic content rules. Under the guise of competition from China, the Bank posted a public notice just before Thanksgiving soliciting comments on weakening its current domestic content requirements. Proposals to weaken the current content rules would allow U.S. exporters to offshore more American jobs to other countries and receive Ex-Im financing to do so.

https://www.marketscreener.com/news/latest/International-Association-of-Machinis...


Korea's Eximbank provides $500 mil. for Mozambique gas project

(Korea Times, Seoul, 14 December 2020) The Export-Import Bank of Korea (Eximbank) said Monday it will provide $500 million (545 billion won) in financial support for a major integrated liquefied natural gas (LNG) project in Mozambique. The project financing by the state-run lender is aimed at helping Korean companies successfully complete the construction of two LNG plants. The total value of the project is about $23.5 billion. When the project is finished, about 12.9 million tons of LNG will be produced from the plants annually. This amounts to 23 percent of Korea's annual LNG imports. "We expect the project to create 1,300 new jobs annually and promote foreign exchange earnings," an official from the lender said. The Korean construction and equipment manufacturers taking part in the project plan to invest $550 million in the five-year project. Eximbank also said it expects two Korean shipbuilders ― Hyundai Heavy Industries and Samsung Heavy Industries ― to win orders for 17 LNG ships, though contract negotiations are still underway. This is not the first Korean Exim's project in Mozambique. A group of eight export credit agencies have joined the project across the globe. They include Eximbank, the Export-Import Bank of the United States, the Japan Bank for International Cooperation and SACE from Italy. The project has exposed workers to Covid-19 and created a natural resource curse in Mozambique where export credit agencies have supported hugh MNC oil and gas developments.

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/biz/2020/12/175_300864.html


Too Many Eggs in the Dragon’s Basket? Part Two: Diversifying Australia’s Export Base

(Future Directions, Nedlands, 15 December 2020) Since the publication of Part One of this paper, further deterioration in the Australia-China political and trading relationships has occurred, with the media offering useful commentary and analysis of the escalation, including as it relates to exports of wine, barley and coal. Despite serious current issues, Australia’s export reliance on China as a key destination for commodity exports will continue, but concurrent initiatives to broaden and grow the export base have to be pursued. Productivity benefits accrue from exporting, but the primary explanation is economically simplistic, in that countries promote their exports to cover the payments made for imports. Australia needs to continuously import an array of products and services that are not produced domestically but which are vital to sustaining the economy and preserving a high standard of living.

https://www.futuredirections.org.au/publication/too-many-eggs-in-the-dragons-bas...


UK widens access to export loans as post-Brexit transition ends

(Reuters, London, 7 December 2020) Britain’s government said on Monday it would offer a wider range of loan guarantees to promote exports as part of a drive to boost overseas sales following the country’s departure from the European Union, its biggest foreign market. Lenders will receive a state guarantee for 80% of the money they lend to companies to support exports, up to 25 million pounds per business. The guarantees will be available to support working capital and other general costs, and will not be tied to specific export contracts, which was usually the case under previous schemes underwritten by export credit body UK Export Finance.

https://www.reuters.com/article/britain-economy-exports/uk-widens-access-to-expo...


UKEF concerned over ‘largely unused’ export credit facility

(The NEWS, Islamabad, 11 December 2020) The UK on Thursday asked Pakistan to expedite utilisation of 1.5 billion pounds of annual UKEF credit line by facilitating UK businesses investing in and exporting to the South Asian economy. British High Commissioner to Pakistan Christian Turner said £1.5 billion of credit line for export credit facility remains largely unused. “British companies are keen to invest in [sic - invest in, not "sell to"] the energy sector of Pakistan especially in off-grid solutions and distribution, generation system,” Turner said. The UK credit financing for Pakistan has tripled in the last two years. In September, UK Export Finance, a state-owned credit financing agency, increased its annual funding limit to £1.5 billion from £1 billion earlier for British businesses to promote trade with and investment in Pakistan.

https://www.thenews.com.pk/print/756710-uk-concerned-over-largely-unused-export-...


Ugandans question ECA supported EACOP pipeline vs energy transition

(Daily Monitor, Kampala, 30 November 2020) In the wake of Covid-19, there is need for governments to ensure a just recovery and transition to low-carbon energy systems for economic and social recovery. Clearly, the government continues to fail Ugandans in-terms of current fossil fuels development plans. Government is still making progress towards development of its 6.5 billion barrels of oil, with plans to build a $3.5b East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP). However, as government seeks to turn oil reserves into tomorrow’s fuels, oil development will certainly further lock us onto the path to irreversible climate change and failure to meet Paris Climate Agreement, goals. Moreover, many oil projects continue to rob locals of their land and livelihoods in violation of their land and other property rights. These are degrading the environment and climate in equal measure,  hence fuelling a triple crisis. Mr. Cyrus Kabaale, Uganda

https://www.monitor.co.ug/uganda/oped/letters/use-oil-to-cause-energy-transition...


UAE, Israel export credit agencies sign trade cooperation deal

(Gulf News, Dubai, 13 December 2020) Etihad Credit Insurance (ECI), the UAE Federal export credit company, and The Israel Foreign Trade Risks Insurance Corporation (ASHR’A) have agreed to jointly create a strategic cooperation in supporting exports, trade and investment; explore new business opportunities; and forge collaborations in technical assistance, training, and capacity building in both countries. The annual exchange of trade between the UAE and Israel in a wide spectrum of industries is expected to reach $4 billion (Dh14.68 billion) a year. Under the US promoted UAE-Israel Abraham Accords, the first normalization of relations between an Arab country and Israel since that of Egypt in 1979 and Jordan in 1994, the UAE has abolished Federal Law No. 15 of 1972 regarding the Arab League Boycott of Israel and the penalties thereof. As there are no Emirati embassies in Israel document authentication for company and bank account setup will also be a challenge.

https://gulfnews.com/business/uae-israel-export-credit-agencies-sign-trade-coope...


Ukrainian-UK Defense Cooperation: Will UKEF Have Kyiv’s Back?

(Eurasia Daily Monitor, Washington, 15 December 2020) In October 2020 a funding pledge was made by the UK’s export credit agency in the amount of 1.25 billion pounds ($1.68 billion) for the construction of missile boats and new naval infrastructure in Ukraine. Missile boats and naval bases are critically important to Ukraine’s capacity to deter an enemy as well as respond in a crisis in the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov. These capabilities are crucial to Ukraine in this closed maritime theater considering Russia’s overwhelming superiority when it comes to anti-ship missiles. Moreover, London promised to send Royal Navy ships to the region in order to boost Ukraine’s ability to combat threats in the Black Sea.

https://jamestown.org/program/ukrainian-uk-defense-cooperation-will-london-have-...


Massive SACE loan from Italy to Egypt

(Middle East Eye, London, 11 December 2020) Government sources in Egypt familiar with economic and military cooperation with Italy have revealed that an agreement is imminent between the Egyptian government and the Italian Export Credit Agency (Sace), reported Al Araby Al Jadeed. The agreement would clear the way for Egypt to obtain a loan of more than 5bn euros ($6 bn), which would be financed by a number of Italian and European banks, the news website said. The loan would be disbursed in phases during the current and following fiscal years and used to finance half of the amount required in the Italian-Egyptian arms deal, worth about 11bn euros ($13.3 bn), according to the sources. The sources said that Egypt had previously purchased two Italian multipurpose frigates (FREMM) as part of the deal worth 1.2bn euros ($1.45bn), of which 500m  euros ($605m) were a loan from Italy to the Egyptian Ministry of Defence. The new loan would increase the interest rate by about five percent over the previous one. However, the sources refused to disclose the interest rate that had been agreed upon. Any new deal would impose significant economic burdens on Egypt for about seven years, with the Ministry of Defence paying the largest instalment of the value of these loans, according to the sources.

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/israel-algeria-footballer-trip-fury-arab-pres...


Shipping lenders face carbon cutting shortfalls despite Poseidon Principles

(Reuters, London, 16 December 2020) Many of the world’s biggest lenders to shipping companies fell short of carbon-cutting targets last year in the first analysis of CO2 goals for the sector. Global shipping accounts for nearly 3% of the world’s CO2 emissions and the industry is under pressure to reduce those emissions and other pollution. About 90% of world trade is transported by sea. Last year, a group of leading banks signed up to environmental commitments known as the Poseidon Principles, whereby financiers take account of efforts to cut CO2 emissions when providing loans to shipping companies. In the first climate assessment report issued by the signatories, which includes emissions data collected from borrowers, just 3 of 15 financiers – Bpifrance Assurance Export, Export Credit Norway and ING – were aligned with IMO decarbonisation targets in 2019. Twenty banks jointly representing approximately USD 150 billion in shipping finance, have come together to commit to the Poseidon Principles, some of them ECAs.

https://gcaptain.com/shipping-lenders-fall-short-of-sectors-carbon-targets/


Swedish ECAs propose $2-billion credit for aviation development in Vietnam

(VnExpress International, Hanoi, 6 December 2020) Swedish financial institutions have proposed a commercial loan to develop aviation projects in Vietnam, including the Long Thanh International Airport. The Swedish Export Credit Agency and the state-owned Export Credit Corporation in Sweden have now proposed increasing the credit limit to $2 billion to cover upgrade projects and air traffic management expansion. To be eligible for the credit line, Vietnam will have to use 30% of the loan to purchase Swedish technologies and equipment. In addition to the Long Thanh and Tan Son Nhat airports, Vietnam plans to upgrade other airports. The country currently has 22 civilian airports. They served near 116 million passengers last year, up 12 percent from 2018.

https://e.vnexpress.net/news/business/economy/sweden-proposes-2-billion-credit-f...


Norwegian Air secures court protection over €4.1bn debts

(Irish Times, Dublin, 7 December 2020) Norwegian Air Shuttle secured a crucial lifeline on Monday when the High Court granted the embattled carrier and five Irish subsidiaries protection from creditors. Norwegian owes creditors, mainly aircraft lessors and banks, more than $5 billion (€4.1 billion) in total, while it faces running out of cash early next year. Its 140 aircraft are held by companies based in Ireland. US aircraft lessor Aviation Capital Group recently got a judgement in the English High Court for $6.3 million for rent due on Boeing 737s.  The Export Import Bank of the United States, which has given export credit guarantees to Boeing, is owed $46 million, while the carrier’s potential liability could run into the hundreds of millions, tied to ten 737s and three 787s.

https://www.irishtimes.com/business/transport-and-tourism/norwegian-air-secures-...


Hungarian & Russian ECAs sign $1.17 billion Egyptian rail deal

(TXF News, New York, 9 December 2020) Egyptian National Railways (ENR) raised the benchmark for big-ticket export finance collaboration at the end of 2019, after the state-owned company signed a €1 billion ($1.17 billion) dual ECA-backed buyer’s credit facility to back the procurement of 1,300 Transmashholding passenger coaches from the Russian supplier. The more than 15-year financing, which involved three countries and marked the largest project in ENR’s history to date, will be provided between Hungary's HEXIM, the Hungarian Export-Import Bank and the Hungarian Export Credit Insurance that are operating in an integrated manner as the ECA of Hungary, and Russia’s Roseximbank, and the Russian Agency for Export Credit and Investment Insurance (EXIAR).

https://www.txfnews.com/News/Article/7096/Shop-talk-HEXIM-A-one-stop-shop-kind-o...


Russian Export Forum to focus on COVID-driven incentives for businesses

(RT News, Moscow, 7 December 2020) On December 9, the 'Made in Russia’ International Export Forum will hold a roundtable on “Fine-tuning the export support framework: countering the downturn in global trade.” Russian and foreign experts are expected to focus on the current state of global trade, support measures as well as prospects for 2021. It will bring together experts from development institutions and export credit agencies, as well as specialized international organizations to discuss current trends in global trade and key support measures during the ongoing pandemic. The participants will also share their forecasts for the next year.

https://www.rt.com/sponsored-content/508911-made-in-russia-forum-trade/


China, Japan, and S. Korea see $205 billion renewable energy market in Southeast Asia

(Webwire, Tokyo, 15 December 2020) A report from Greenpeace Japan identifies a US$205 billion opportunity for [ECA] renewable energy finance in Southeast Asia in the next ten years – 2.6 times bigger than the coal market of the past decade. From 2009 to 2019, major public banks in China, Japan, and South Korea invested only USD $9.1 billion in solar and wind, but USD $78.9 billion in coal and gas, making them top public financiers of fossil fuels globally. But this started to shift in 2020, as did national climate commitments from these G3 countries. From 2021 to 2030, Southeast Asian demand for electricity will need invested capital worth USD $125.1 billion for solar energy, USD $48.1 billion for wind energy, and USD $32.6 billion for other renewable energy sources, the report found. Additionally, Southeast Asia’s emerging green bonds market is making an international shift away from fossil fuel finance (both public and private). The report provides a rare cross-region snapshot of public and private finance. Despite being an OECD member, China blends official aid and export credit numbers in public financial disclosures in violation of OECD-DAC criteria. This makes public money harder to track. Furthermore, private finance is not widely transparent among the three countries, and analysts rely on third-party data, which is by nature incomplete.

https://www.webwire.com/ViewPressRel.asp?aId=267899


Crisis response: a paradigm shift for ECAs

(Global Trade Review, London, 10 December 2020) When Covid-19 brought global trade to a near standstill, export credit agencies (ECA) stepped up by introducing or expanding cover for working capital programmes, rather than traditional project-led financing. But with the pandemic still raging and concerns over insolvency growing, do companies need to see a paradigm shift in export credit?

https://www.gtreview.com/supplements/gtr-insurance-2020/crisis-response-paradigm...


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