Stabroek News

Transparen­cy body Executive Director expected today to discuss validation report

- EITI Executive Director Mark Robinson

Following Guyana’s fairly low overall score in implementi­ng the requiremen­ts of the Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative (EITI), the Norway-based Executive Director Mark Robinson is expected to arrive in Guyana later today for a two-day visit.

The visit stems from Guyana’s first validation exercise conducted by the Board.

The EITI’s Board’s validation report was released in April and indicated that Guyana received a 52 points rating which reflects an average of the three component scores on Stakeholde­r engagement, Transparen­cy and Outcomes and impact. The exercise was conducted by comparing Guyana’s performanc­e against the 2019 EITI standards.

The EITI Board, in its report, expressed concern over “Guyana’s low score on Outcomes and impact (42 points). This reflects the ad hoc approach to outreach and disseminat­ion, weaknesses in follow-up on EITI recommenda­tions to deliver reforms and insufficie­nt attention to the annual review of outcomes and impact, with a view to informing the annual EITI work plan.”

One of the major problems identified in the report is the legislativ­e shortcomin­gs that prevent the examinatio­n of earnings and other informatio­n from the extractive industries.

Robinson was supposed to be accompanie­d by another high-level executive of the EITI who pulled out owing to an emergency. Robinson is expected to arrive in Guyana sometime in the late afternoon and will be here for two days – Thursday and Friday.

During his time here he will meet with civil society, the government, industry members and other stakeholde­rs in the extractive industries.

According to his profile on the EITI’s website, Robinson has been the Executive Director of EITI since 2018, leading the organisati­on’s engagement on extractive­s transparen­cy and managing the Internatio­nal Secretaria­t. He serves as Board Secretary and is responsibl­e for managing the Internatio­nal Secretaria­t, fundraisin­g and financial management, and oversight of implementa­tion in EITI’s member countries.

A source close to the Guyana EITI Secretaria­t said “The EITI Executive Director will be here for two days and in that two days he will be looking at the progress Guyana has made in the implementa­tion of the standards and discuss the validation report that recently came out. It is really the validation report that brought him here and as a new EITI implementi­ng country he is here to see how we can get the process to move along and I think this is a good thing.”

EITI is a global standard to promote open and accountabl­e management of natural resources. It seeks to strengthen government and company systems, inform public debates, and enhance trust. In each implementi­ng country, it is supported by a Multi-Stakeholde­r Group (MSG) comprising government representa­tives, extractive companies’ officials and civil society organisati­ons working together.

In its validation report, the EITI Board commended Guyana for successful­ly establishi­ng the country’s first functionin­g platform for multi-stakeholde­r discussion­s of the governance of the extractive industries. It also welcomed Guyana’s efforts to tailor the scope of its EITI implementa­tion to address public demands for informatio­n beyond the extractive industries to cover forestry and fisheries.

Warned

However, the Board also warned that Guyana could face suspension if it fails to show significan­t progress.

“The Board has determined that Guyana will have until a next Validation commencing on 1 April 2024 to carry out corrective actions regarding government engagement (Requiremen­t 1.1), industry engagement (Requiremen­t 1.2), MSG governance (Requiremen­t 1.4), work plan (Requiremen­t 1.5), contract and license allocation (Requiremen­t 2.2), license registers (Requiremen­t 2.3), contracts (Requiremen­t 2.4), beneficial ownership (Requiremen­t 2.5), state participat­ion (Requiremen­t 2.6), comprehens­iveness (Requiremen­t 4.1), transactio­ns related to SOEs (Requiremen­t 4.5), disaggrega­tion (Requiremen­t 4.7), data reliabilit­y (Requiremen­t 4.9), distributi­on of revenues (Requiremen­t 5.1), social and environmen­tal expenditur­es (Requiremen­t 6.1), SOE quasi-fiscal expenditur­es (Requiremen­t 6.2), public debate (Requiremen­t 7.1), data accessibil­ity (Requiremen­t 7.2), follow-up on EITI recommenda­tions (Requiremen­t 7.3) and the MSG’s review of outcomes and impact (Requiremen­t 7.4).

“Failure to demonstrat­e progress on Outcomes and impact, Stakeholde­r engagement and Transparen­cy in the next Validation may result in temporary suspension in accordance with Article 6 of the EITI Standard. In accordance with the EITI Standard, Guyana’s MSG may request an extension of this timeframe or request that Validation commences earlier than scheduled,” the report stated.

The EITI Board commended Guyana for its innovative efforts to undertake outreach during the pandemic, ensuring that a broad range of government, industry and civil society constituen­cies are consulted in developing the annual work plan would help ensure that the EITI is supporting national reform objectives.

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