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  in focus  
28 April 2008  

Oil, gas and minerals, or the extractive industries generate great wealth. Oil export revenues for 2006 alone are estimated to make up approximately 1.8 percent of the World’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and more than half of the combined GDP of the 53 lowest income nations.

High revenues from the extractive industries have often fuelled corruption, economic stagnation, inequality and conflict. One step towards reversing this curse lies in the transparent and accountable management of revenues generated from the extractive industries.

2008 Report on Revenue Transparency of Oil and Gas Companies

What is the Promoting Revenue Transparency Project?
Recommendations based on key findings
Press release
Download centre: Report and related material
Podcast: Comments on the Report
Launch day events
National launch events
Related news
Media contacts
Promoting Revenue Transparency Project website

What is the Promoting Revenue Transparency Project?

The Promoting Revenue Transparency Project is run by Transparency International in partnership with the Revenue Watch Institute, and builds on the work of the Save the Children UK ‘Beyond the Rhetoric’ report from 2005. The project aims at making extractive industries’ revenues of most benefit to society by increasing transparency and accountability of extractive industry revenues.

To achieve this purpose, the project provides robust standards for revenue transparency and tools to measure progress, encouraging companies and governments engaged in the extractive industries to improve transparency and accountability to citizens and investors.

The Promoting Revenue Transparency Project has three specific objectives which add value to existing revenue transparency initiatives:

To measure revenue transparency performance and diagnose areas for improvement.

   

To develop broad standards for revenue transparency.

   

To support the use of the revenue transparency standards and measures of performance by companies, rating agencies, investors, government regulators and civil society.

Achieving, sustaining and mainstreaming revenue transparency

Insisting on transparent governance is necessary to transform the resource curse into a blessing. Greater public knowledge of the scale of extractive industry revenues, how these flow from oil producers to governments, as well as greater understanding of the oversight systems that are in place, can potentially place pressures on governments to use these revenues in the public interest in support economic growth and poverty reduction. Absent such transparency, governments and companies may behave in ways that will enhance the wealth of the few and yield no benefit to the many.

A vital approach to improving transparency lies in strengthening the accountability of decision-makers – of host governments and companies to citizens, and of companies to investors. This requires a strong role for civil society in monitoring processes and in constructive partnerships with companies and governments. To secure meaningful accountability there has to be adequate information about the resources being extracted and the flow of revenues to public authorities.

Four principal stakeholders can improve the transparency of such financial information in the context of the extractive sector: companies can publish what and who they are paying; host governments can publish what they are receiving from companies; home governments of the companies can regulate and enforce the disclosure of such information; and civil society in the host and home countries can act to monitor the payments from companies to public authorities to ensure that information is fully provided to the public at large. The ability of civil society to perform this role rests to no small degree on the actions in this context of the other three stakeholders.

The 2008 Report on Revenue Transparency of Oil and Gas Companies

In the 2008 Report on Revenue Transparency of Oil and Gas Companies, Transparency International (TI) evaluates 42 leading oil and gas companies on their current policies, management systems and performance in areas relevant to revenue transparency in their upstream operations.

Revenue transparency in this report includes three areas of corporate action where disclosure can contribute to improved accountability in the management of extractive revenues: payments to host governments, operations and corporate anti-corruption programmes. The companies are evaluated in a total of 21 countries of operation.

A variety of stakeholders, most notably the companies themselves, were engaged during the research design and data review process. It is important to state that this report and its analysis and recommendations are based on information which is made publicly available by companies. Several companies used the opportunity to review their own data and provide feedback, but despite efforts to engage with all companies at all stages of the project, regrettably more than 30 companies did not use the opportunity to review their data.

The companies in this report were chosen for their relevance, geographic spread and their size, and are not a representative sample of all oil and gas extraction companies. Detailed annexes outline methodology and criteria.

For more detail, please refer to the full report or the summary document (available for download below).

Clarification on Devon Energy’s engagement in the PRT Report

Recommendations based on the key findings of the report

 
  • Oil and gas companies should proactively report in all areas relevant to revenue transparency on a county-by-country basis.

  • Home governments and appropriate regulatory agencies should urgently consider introducing mandatory revenue transparency reporting for the operations of companies at home and abroad.

  • Governments from oil and gas producing countries should urgently introduce regulations that require all companies operating in their territories to make public all information relevant to revenue transparency.

  • Regulatory agencies and companies should improve the accessibility, comprehensiveness and comparability of reporting on all areas of revenue transparency by adopting a uniform global reporting standard.

Press release

English

Spanish

French

Russian

Download centre: Report and related material

 

English

Spanish

French

Russian

Full report

     

Report Summary

FAQs

Backgrounder
Fact Sheet on the Oil and Gas Sector

Speech of Cobus de Swardt, Managing Director Transparency International at the Launch of the 2008 Report on Revenue Transparency of Oil and Gas Companies

Curriculum Cobus de Swardt,
Managing Director Transparency International

Curriculum Juanita Olaya, Programme Manager, Promoting Revenue Transparency

Podcast

  • Comments about the 2008 Report on Revenue Transparency of Oil and Gas Companies from Juanita Olaya and Karin Lissakers of the Revenue Watch Institute.
    PLAY
    download mp3
  • Interview with Elena Panfilova (Transparency International Russia) about the 2008 Report on Revenue Transparency of Oil and Gas Companies on Bulgarian National Radio
    download mp3

Launch of the 2008 Companies Report

Press conference

Monday, 28 April 2008, 10:30am (London time)

Foreign Press Association, The Mall Room
11 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1 Y 5AJ

Panel discussion

Turning a transparent profit in the oil & gas industry:
Opportunities and challenges for revenue transparency

With:
Vanessa Herringshaw, Director London Office, Revenue Watch Institute
Keith Myers, Partner, Richmond Energy Partners
Juanita Olaya, Revenue Transparency Programme Manager, Transparency International

Moderated by:
Michael Peel, Legal Correspondent, Financial Times

Welcome remarks:
Cobus de Swardt, Managing Director, Transparency International

Monday, 28 April 2008, 6:30pm (London time)

The International Institute for Strategic Studies, Arundel House
13-15, Arundel Street, Temple Place, London WC2R 3DX

National launch events

Location

Organisers

More information

Date

Algier, Algeria

TI Algeria (AACC)

 

28 April

Ottawa, Canada

TI Canada, Partnerships Africa Canada and PWYP

Joint launch from 9-11am followed by a 30 min press conference

9 May

Washington, USA

PWYP, Oxfam America, Global Witness, RWI

Launch event

5 May

Jakarta, Indonesia

TI Indonesia

Panel discussion, with speakers from TI, Pertamina, PWYP Indonesia coalition, and government representative

Press Release

29 April

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

TI Malaysia & Centre for Public Policy Studies

 

28 April (tbc)

Seoul, Korea (South)

TI Korea

Press release

28 April (tbc)

Paris, France

TI France and Secours Catholique France

Public conference and press event

5 May

Madrid, Spain

Oxfam and Possibly TI Spain

 

25 May (tbc)

Manila, Philippines

TI Philippines

Press conference

28 April (tbc)

Related News

Media contacts

TI-Secretariat press office:

+49-(0)30-3438 20 666
press@transparency.org


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