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[Joint Statement] Japan must not be allowed to violate the G7 Leaders’ Statement – Supporting new Coal Plants in Indonesia and Bangladesh goes against the Agreement –

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[Joint Statement]
Japan must not be allowed to violate the G7 Leaders’ Statement
– Supporting new Coal Plants in Indonesia and Bangladesh
goes against the Agreement –

In response to the G7 Cornwall Summit Leaders’ Statement, the Japanese government revised its policy on providing support for overseas coal-fired power projects on June 17, stating to “end new direct international government support for unabated coal-fired power generation by the end of 2021” (*1). Nevertheless, the Japanese government is determined to exclude from this new policy the new yen loans for the main construction of the Indramayu coal-fired power project (Indonesia) and the Matarbari coal-fired power project Phase 2 (Bangladesh) through the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA). We strongly condemn such determination by the Japanese government.

The fact that the Japanese government is violating the contents of the G7 Leaders’ Statement was confirmed when a Japanese civil society organization checked with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) whether the policy applies to the aforementioned 2 projects (*2). According to MoFA’s response, the 2 projects are already in the process of being implemented and are not considered as new projects, thus are excluded from the scope of the G7 Leaders’ Statement. 

However, in some cases in the past, MoFA has interpreted projects that are “in process for implementation” as “new projects” and has decided to stop such new projects. For example, when official development assistance (ODA) for Vietnam and Indonesia were suspended due to corruption issues, the adoption of new projects suspended (*3). Currently, the Japanese government is continuing to disburse loans for the engineering service in Indramayu and is conducting a preparatory survey for Matarbari 2. It is inconsistent for the Japanese government to exclude these 2 projects from the new policy by stating that they are not “new” because they are “in process for implementation.”

Also, for both projects, the main construction has not started and the loan for construction has not yet been adopted. As such, it is feasible enough to not provide these types of support in the future, in other words, to end direct support for coal-fired power generation by the end of 2021. 

The G7 Leaders’ Statement is committed to aligning international public finance with the net-zero by 2050 goal, hence supporting the construction of new coal-fired power plants goes against this agreement. Japan’s biased logic described above is unacceptable in the international community. Inevitably, Japan will once again be criticized on the global stage, such as at this year’s G20 and COP26, for undermining global decarbonization efforts. 

Therefore, the Japanese government should review the interpretation of “new” support in the G7 Leaders’ Agreement and state that it will not adopt an ODA loan for the main construction of Indramayu and Matarbari 2 coal-fired power projects. 

Footnotes

*1: http://www.kantei.go.jp/jp/singi/keikyou/dai51/siryou3.pdf (in Japanese)
*2: JACSES contacted MoFA on June 14 and the MoFA responded on June 25.
*3: MoFA, “Further efforts by both Japan and Vietnam to prevent fraudulent corruption over Official Development Assistance (ODA) projects” https://www.mofa.go.jp/mofaj/press/release/press4_001075.html
MoFA, “Efforts of both Japan and Indonesia to prevent fraudulent corruption over official development assistance projects” https://www.mofa.go.jp/mofaj/press/release/press4_001075.html

Contact

Yuki Tanabe, Japan Center for a Sustainable Environment and Society (JACSES)
Email: tanabe@jacses.org

Hozue Hatae, Friends of the Earth Japan
Email: hatae@foejapan.org 

All signatories

Japan Center for a Sustainable Environment and Society (JACSES)
Kiko Network
Friends of the Earth Japan
350.org Japan
Mekong Watch