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UK stance on EU extractives law 'inspired' by Rio Tinto-Euro MP

by Luke Balleny | http://www.twitter.com/LBalleny | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Wednesday, 10 April 2013 22:27 GMT

Contrary to public rhetoric, Britain attempted to undermine attempts by European lawmakers to make extractive companies report their payments on a project basis, Arlene McCarthy said

    * UK took Rio Tinto's stance in talks on new rules-Arlene McCarthy

   * UK attempted to undermine project disclosure-McCarthy

   * Britain says sought balance between transparency, business burden

   By Luke Balleny

   LONDON, April 10 (TrustLaw) - Britain attempted to undermine a European law that aims to bring greater transparency to the oil, gas, mining and logging sectors despite the government's public declarations that it supports more disclosure, the European lawmaker who led the negotiations said on Wednesday.

   The world's second-largest mining company, Rio Tinto Group <RIO.L>, influenced the British government's proposals and Britain was unhelpful in ensuring smooth progress of the legislation, Arlene McCarthy, a U.K. Labour politician in the European Parliament, said in an interview with TrustLaw.  

   The EU legislation requiring companies to make detailed disclosures of their natural resource contracts was finalised by lawmakers late on Tuesday after months of deliberation. McCarthy said it now is expected to easily win full parliamentary approval before endorsement by EU leaders.   

   "There is a general view really that they (Britain) were working very closely with Rio Tinto. Rio Tinto inspired a lot of their original proposal," McCarthy said of the British government's negotiating position.

   Britain hued closely during the talks on Tuesday to the industry position that companies should only disclose contracts at the government level, even though Prime Minister David Cameron had given a speech about a year ago saying that Britain was committed to the higher transparency standard of project-level reporting -- a stance pressed by civil society, McCarthy said. 

   Cameron has made transparency one of his three priorities as host of the Group of 8 meetings of major industrialised countries this year. In a speech in January in Davos, Switzerland, he explicitly called for more transparency in extractive industries as a way to combat corruption and alleviate poverty in resource-rich countries.

   But McCarthy said the U.K's actions did not match his words.

   "On the one hand, the rhetoric is fine, claiming that you are leading on the issues, but that certainly was not the case when it comes to practical negotiations or influencing other member countries to try and get a better deal. They did not push for anything like that at all," she said.

   Cameron is Conservative Party leader and McCarthy is from the opposition Labour Party. 

   The U.K.'s Department of Business, Innovation and Skills said it consulted with a range of interested parties ahead of the vote. "We fully recognised the importance of working together with both NGOs (non-governmental organisations) and industry to agree a standard that improved transparency but did not impose unnecessary burdens on business," a department spokesperson said.  

   Rio Tinto spokesman David Outhwaite said the company would not comment on rumour and speculation and strongly backs transparency. "We support initiatives such as the (EU) Directive that encourage better governance, prosperity and stability in the countries in which we operate," he said.  

   The European law orders firms to report payments at project as well as at country level, beginning at a threshold of 100,000 euros ($130,600), higher than some campaigners had hoped, but far below the million-dollar level resource firms had said was practical.

    A major sticking point in the negotiations was whether companies should be excluded from complying with the regulations in countries which have national laws that industry says forbid the disclosure. However, the European lawmakers decided against allowing any exemptions, a position that Britain backed in public on Tuesday.

   "It was very important that there were no exemptions," McCarthy said.

   "For us, that was a very tough battle to fight with the member states because many of them wanted to have exemptions for these situations and cases where they argue that it is prohibited in the national companies' law where they operate to disclose that information - for which they failed to provide any evidence," she said.

   "That's why we weren't prepared to even countenance or negotiate on that issue," McCarthy added.

   The European law echoes tough legislation passed in the United States last year, which has led to a court challenge brought by industry body the American Petroleum Institute (API) against the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the U.S. financial regulator tasked with implementing the law.

   McCarthy said that, taken together, the two sets of legislation amount to a global standard of transparency in the extractive sector.

   "We are talking in these very big extractive operations about a handful of very big multinational companies and now we will have global rules and the global rules are equivalent because we've made sure of that by working very closely with regulators in the U.S.," McCarthy said.

   "Of course, my hope would be that the API may see the error of their ways and drop their lawsuit and recognise that in this day and age it is time to be more transparent," she said.

   NGOs have lobbied for over a decade to require publicly traded companies to disclose what they pay for the right to extract natural resources, as a way to hold governments accountable. In resource-rich countries, over three billion people live in poverty despite immense national wealth.  

(Reporting by Luke Balleny; Editing by Stella Dawson and Dan Grebler)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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