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FGG Alliance and ABP/APG make joint statement regarding OECD complaint

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As part of an international coalition of NGOs, the Fair Green & Global Alliance (FGG) filed an OECD complaint in 2012 against pension fund ABP and its fund asset manager All Pension Group (APG), who have shares in South Korean company Pohang Iron and Steel Company (POSCO). As a result of the complaint, the Netherlands National Contact Point (NCP) facilitated a dialogue between ABP/APG and the FGG, which led to a joint agreement and a statement from the Netherlands NCP. With this agreement the parties hope to make a positive contribution to a solution for the continuing escalation of conflict in India. A conflict where violence is being used against the local population near POSCO’s disputed mining project in Odisha and where human rights are not being respected.

The international coalition has been formed by the Dutch FGG(opens in new window) , the Indian civilians’ movement Lok Shakti Abhiyan, the Norwegian NGO coalition ForUM and the South Korean Trans National Corporation Watch. In 2012 this coalition filed reports of the violation of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises by POSCO with the Netherlands, Norwegian and South Korean Contact Points for OECD Guidelines. The complaint is directed at POSCO but also concerns Norwegian pension fund GPFG and Dutch pension fund ABP and its fund asset manager, All Pension Group (APG). ABP has shares in POSCO worth approximately € 17m(opens in new window) . According to the international coalition, the aforementioned stakeholders have done too little to improve the situation and they are being called upon to exert more pressure on POSCO.

What is POSCO doing wrong?

POSCO is planning to develop a large steel plant, mining operations and a port in Indian state Odisha, including roads and railroads. This would lead to irreparable damage to nature and the environment in the area, and tens of thousands of people would become displaced and lose their source of income. Meanwhile violence by the local police and hired gangs against the local population that is protesting the POSCO plans has already led to multiple deaths. Despite the powerful resistance, the lack of complete ‘impact assessments’ as well as the lack of all the required licenses, POSCO is continuing with its plans undeterred. There is no meaningful dialogue with the local communities.

Netherlands NCP investigates role of ABP/APG

The Netherlands National Contact point (NCP) only handled the complaint against the Dutch institutions ABP and APG; POSCO and the Norwegian Pension fund fell outside of its scope. In its statement, the Netherlands NCP confirms(opens in new window) that the OECD Guidelines also apply to financial institutions that have minority shares in multinational enterprises. With a share of less than 1% in POSCO, ABP/APG, according to the Netherlands NCP, most definitely has a responsibility under OECD Guidelines to try to prevent or mitigate any violations carried out by POSCO. This statement will affect future similar situations.
The Netherlands NCP will take steps to set up an international mission, in cooperation with the Korean and Norwegian NCPs, to chart the local situation and see how an effective local dialogue can be initiated.

Joint statement FGG and ABP/APG

After various meetings where the representatives of the FGG Alliance, ABP and APG entered into dialogue with each other, they wrote a joint declaration.(opens in new window) In this document they agree on the following points:

Case not closed

This is not the end of the story, this concerns a preliminary statement from the Netherlands NCP. It has committed itself to setting up the evaluation and research mission, with the cooperation of the Norwegian and Korean NCPs being a key ingredient. The FGG will continue to follow developments closely.

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