NEWS
September 9, 2008

Legal Analyst Matthew Genasci on EITI Reporting in "Oil & Gas Journal"

In an August 25 Letter to the Editor, RWI's Matthew Genasci notes the great benefits of disaggregated reporting by extractive companies from a development and accountability perspective. The letter challenges an earlier journal article’s argument that companies should insist on aggregated reporting to minimize the risk of investigation under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. 

The advice of Mara V.J. Senn and Rachel Frankel ("Firms can avoid EITI, FCPA pitfalls", July 21), gives short shrift to the legitimate concerns of the citizens of many resource-rich countries and runs counter to evolving practice among countries and companies to use more disaggregated reporting under the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI). While it is true that EITI does not require disaggregated reporting, disaggregation prevents free-riding and improves the climate of accountability in the extractive sector—a chief goal of EITI and other efforts to address the so-called "paradox of plenty". Countries such as Nigeria and Mongolia are already requiring disaggregated reporting under EITI, and a number of extractive companies already unilaterally report their payments to governments, country by country and broken down by type of payment. Apparently these companies have concluded that the benefits of such disclosure outweigh any perceived risks, legal or otherwise.

Obviously, the authors write with the lawyerly objective of helping clients minimize legal risk. But even from this narrow perspective, we question some of their conclusions. The authors argue that disaggregated reporting could give rise to heightened FCPA scrutiny in the case of discrepancies between reported company payments and country receipts, but then acknowledge that FCPA investigations of large international companies are still possible with aggregated reporting in the case of significant discrepancies. Where a company makes no improper payments and accurately reports, disaggregated reporting offers the best protection from FCPA scrutiny; with aggregated reporting, a large international company could more easily be swept up into an investigation simply because of the actions of less scrupulous companies in the same aggregated reporting pool. Disaggregated reporting is thus preferable not only from an economic development and accountability perspective, but from a legal risk perspective as well.

Matthew Genasci
Revenue Watch Institute
New York, NY

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Pertamina Believes Transparency Will Attract Investors, Allay Public Concerns - Jakarta Globe

Ghana: Wild Expectations Remain a Big Challenge for Country's Oil - Public Agenda

 

NEWS & INFORMATION ARCHIVES

2006, 2005

PUBLICATIONS

Contracts Confidential: Ending Secret Deals in the Extractive Industries
Contract transparency is sorely needed to improve the management of natural resource wealth. In a new report from RWI, authors Peter Rosenblum and Susan Maples delve into government and private sector objections to contract disclosure and make conclusions about what information may legitimately and reasonably be kept confidential, and how civil society institutions can better confront the challenge of secret deals.
Learn more about the report ...

Drilling Down
This milestone guide from the Revenue Watch Institute provides step-by-step explanations of each phase of EITI implementation and a comprehensive review of extractive industries accounting for civil society readers.
Learn more about Drilling Down ...