G8

G8 endorses mandatory oil, gas and mining payment transparency

Today for the first time, the G8 endorsed mandatory disclosure of extractive industry payments to governments.

Kinshasa Declaration, PWYP Africa Regional Meeting May 2011

You can view this declaration in its original PDF format

Africa Regional Meeting

Kinshasa Declaration

Members and partners of the Publish What You Pay coalition, from over thirty countries in Africa, Europe, North and South America, gathered from the 24 – 27 May 2011 in Kinshasa (Democratic Republic of Congo) for PWYP’s Africa Regional Meeting.

Letter from UK Secretary of State for International Development to PWYP members

On 4 July 2011 UK Secretary of State for International Development Rt Hon Andrew Mitchell MP wrote to PWYP members in response to their letter on 24 June 2011.

Read the Secretary of State’s response in PDF.

Publish What You Pay NGO coalition statement to the 2004 G8 summit

The Publish What You Pay (PWYP) coalition of over 220 NGOs worldwide1 welcomes the progress that has been made on promoting transparency in the oil, gas and mining industries worldwide since last year’s G8 summit. However, serious concerns remain about the effectiveness of the G8 member states’ voluntary approach to transparency, and the lack of proper and meaningful follow-up efforts to fulfil commitments made in Evian

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PWYP Nigeria policy recommendations to the Commission for Africa

The Commission for Africa should endorse the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) and the Publish What You Pay as approaches for tackling the problems associated with the extractive industries in Nigeria

Publish What You Pay NGO coalition statement to the Evian G8 Summit

“The Publish What You Pay (PWYP) coalition of over 110 NGOs strongly welcomes the inclusion of extractive industries transparency on the agenda at the G8 Summit in Evian. The French Government has proposed to focus on the broad theme of the financial, social and ethical responsibility of governments and corporations in which transparency will be addressed..”

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The Publish What You Pay Initiative

Washington D.C. – It is a sad and perverse paradox of today’s global economy that some of the very wealthiest developing countries are also the very poorest. Countries possessing an abundance of diamonds, gold, oil, gas and exotic minerals can barely feed, clothe, let alone educate, the bulk of their populations which suffer among the highest infant mortality rates and shortest average life span in the world. War and civil strife, not peace, are the norm in many of these resource- rich but troubled areas.

Time for Transparency

Revenue Transparency: A Priority for Good Governance and Energy Security

Across the globe, revenues from oil, gas and mining that should be funding sustainable economic development have been misappropriated and mismanaged. This Global Witness report considers five major examples of this problem: Kazakhstan, Congo Brazzaville, Angola, Equatorial Guinea and Nauru.

In these countries, governments do not provide even basic information about their revenues from natural resources. Nor do oil, mining and gas companies publish any information about payments made to governments.

Taking forward revenue transparency: a shared responsibility

Considerable progress on improving revenue transparency has been made since the launch of Publish What You Pay (PWYP) in 2002

Publish What You Pay International Coalition Statement to the High-Level EITI Conference, London

Considerable progress on improving revenue transparency has been made since the launch of Publish What You Pay (PWYP) in 2002

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