Sustainability

Engaging with NGOs: Potential for Adding Value?

Expectations have continued to rise over recent years regarding how oil and gas projects and facilities analyze, manage, and communicate about their social and environmental performance. NGOs are among the most interested and active stakeholders, and increasingly they expect to be engaged.

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In August’s Culture Matters column, Ralph Keeney addressed the need to effectively identify the objectives of all stakeholders, including the public. He stressed the benefits of actively using our values in that pursuit.

An important change in the culture of the oil and gas industry in the recent past is increased interest in the plight of the local populations wherever we operate.

One of the ways that we can learn the values and needs of local populations is to engage with nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). But it’s not just the soft values that should drive us to engage effectively with NGOs, and it’s not just about what we can do for them. NGOs can play a constructive role in facilities project development and management. Failure to engage effectively can impact an operator’s license to operate and present impediments to obtaining project funding.

Dealing with NGOs is a topic that most engineers will not know how to tackle. In this column, Andrew Buchman provides expert guidance in the art and science of NGO engagement.—Howard Duhon, GATE, Oil and Gas Facilities Editorial Board


How engaged are oil companies and nongovernmental organizations? Can NGOs play a constructive role in facilities project development and management? Field experience working with NGOs and companies on some of the world’s largest oil and gas projects shows how constructive corporate/NGO engagement can provide value to major oil and gas projects. This experience and lessons learned indicate some developing models for avoiding potential pitfalls and building mutually valuable relationships.

Background

Expectations have continued to rise over recent years regarding how oil and gas projects and facilities analyze, manage, and communicate about their social and environmental performance. NGOs are among the most interested and active stakeholders, particularly with regard to projects located in developing regions and those undertaken in countries with poor governance, financial transparency, and human rights records. Around the world, NGOs increasingly expect meaningful and prolonged company engagement. No longer is it typical that a government-issued permit to explore or develop a new facility marks the sole purpose of and mutually satisfactory end to project-driven stakeholder engagement.

NGO and oil and gas company relationships are commonly portrayed as a tug-of-war, a battle of opposing sides. But while some watchdog NGOs are adamantly and categorically opposed to oil companies and associated projects, this strident position is far from universal. Increasingly, one can find recognition among civil society actors that oil and gas projects are often uniquely positioned to make significant positive contributions to local development. Many NGO representatives would agree with the assessment of a researcher who noted that oil and gas “footprints can be seen in developing countries in the transfer of foreign direct investment, skills, and technology; as major employers of labor; and accounting for a large proportion of state revenue. Their contribution to development in many countries via programs in education, health, commerce, agriculture, transport, construction, etc., cannot be ignored.” (Toudolo 2009)

But growing recognition of such potential development contributions has hardly marked the end of NGO campaigning and opposition. Rather, some civil society organizations continue to target oil companies and seek to influence their actions through strategies such as “boycotts, networking, publicity, sit-ins, walkouts, lobbying, litigation, socially responsible investment, people’s development plans, public hearings … blockades, barricades, seizures and closures, etc., in campaigns (that) involved ethical issues such as environmental, health, safety, corruption, climate change, and human right abuses.” (Tuodolo 2009).

For their part, companies are increasingly recognizing that engagement is not only hard to avoid, but difficult to systematize given that there is no ubiquitous NGO position regarding oil and gas. Instead, corporations are developing distinct strategies for dealing with priority groups and the networks that exist between these groups. As a result, one can observe a spectrum of joint activities ranging from the required and often perfunctory sharing of project information to the joint pursuit of full collaboration and mutual value. And, increasingly, some of this interaction is driven by engagement requirements imposed by financial institutions.

NGO Roles in Oil and Gas Engagement

Representatives of NGOs play a wide variety of roles in relation to oil and gas projects and facilities. Far from being limited strictly to opposition, NGO members may address specific project needs in areas such as 

  • Project permitting consultation as information consumer, challenger, collaborator
  • Financial disclosure as facilitator, partner, challenger
  • Community relations as advisor, advocate, facilitator, organizer
  • Community development as advisor, advocate, facilitator, implementing partner
  • Cultural heritage as advisor, advocate, implementing partner
  • Human rights as advisor, advocate, auditor, challenger, implementing partner
  • Environment as advisor, advocate, challenger, implementing partner

Recommendations: Communication

  • Do consider creating a regular venue for NGO and company/facility interaction, such as a quarterly issues forum. Brief the assembled stakeholders on company activity, but design the meeting (which may be as short as 1-2 hours) to give NGOs the opportunity to share their own work and discuss topics outside the oil and gas project or business activity.
  • Do not allow your regular civil society meeting to focus solely on issues associated with your project. Broaden the scope and learn about other areas of NGO focus. If you can demonstrate interest and reliability, you may hear about developing challenges that could affect your business early enough to change their courses.

Recommendations: Project Information Disclosure

  • Appreciate that NGOs with a transparency mission may provide useful assistance regarding project disclosure. Consider whether the NGO might present a good location to hold public disclosure documents such as environmental and social impact assessments. Such NGOs may also assist in collecting review comments. This can build process credibility.
  • Do not rely exclusively on NGOs to provide adequate space for public disclosure information. It may be necessary to give the cooperating NGOs detailed instructions as to how the disclosure process is meant to work.

Recommendations: Community Investment

  • Consider using local NGOs as implementing partners for social investment and development programs. Pilot programs of 1-year length will give the opportunity to get a better sense of an organization’s ability to manage resources, communicate, and design/implement a work plan. 
  • Do not overlook the dynamics of community/NGO relationships.  Local NGOs may or may not have credibility with target communities. NGOs may exaggerate their own abilities to represent community interests and concerns. Avoid relying exclusively on the NGO to oversee a social program. Successful community projects demand attention and oversight from company representatives as well as implementing NGOs.

Lender Requirements—Social Performance and NGO Interaction

Social performance analysis of major infrastructure companies and projects is no longer limited to ethical funds and socially responsible investors. Mainstream investors and companies that provide financial advisory services are paying more attention to the social performance of companies wherever they operate, not only for ethical reasons but also because they believe that environmental and social performance can affect a project’s delivery on time and on budget, overall operational success, and long-term financial viability. Lenders continue to become more demanding: The Equator Principles and the International Finance Corporation (IFC) Performance Standards established key stipulations for financed project compliance, ranging from applying impact assessments to building appropriate impact management systems. They also include specific guidelines for company/stakeholder interaction. 

In both the Equator Principles and the Performance Standards, stakeholder engagement is explicitly required. Equator Bank financing is dependent upon consultation “in a structured and culturally appropriate manner. For projects with (potentially) significant adverse impacts … the process will ensure their free, prior, and informed consultation and facilitate their informed participation as a means to establish … whether a project has adequately incorporated affected communities’ concerns.” This language is also featured in the IFC’s Performance Standard 1, which requires that “[F]or projects with significant adverse impacts … informed participation involves organized and iterative consultation, leading to the client’s incorporating into their decision-making process the views of the affected communities on matters that affect them directly, such as proposed mitigation measures, the sharing of development benefits and opportunities ... [D]isclosure should occur early in the Social and Environmental Assessment process and in any event before the project construction commences, and on an ongoing basis.”

Of course, while NGOs draw membership from project-affected populations, they are organizations, not communities. Nonetheless, lender-required engagement will often feature such groups because they routinely act as representatives (self-appointed or otherwise) of affected communities. Equally important, NGOs have legitimate interests in project design, impact management, and natural resource protection and use. NGO representatives are also potential facilitators of information exchange between communities and companies. Optimally, they are groups well-positioned to help companies understand local communities and indigenous populations, including past history and current expectations, how authority systems are structured, and how to ensure that the company is able to partner appropriately with the community for its development. NGOs can help enlist community support as a partner in the project, even as they advocate for specific company performance, provided they are seen as an honest broker by both company and community. The basis for such positive engagement is transparency—sharing of information, plans, priorities, and expectations.

Project Information Disclosure

Consultation and disclosure is often the primary model for interaction between NGOs and oil and gas companies. NGOs and civil society stakeholders remain key participants in the public meetings and reviews of project plans that are required in environmental and social impact assessments. In most cases, the input that companies receive during consultation must be addressed before required government permits are issued. Many NGOs and civil society groups provide copious feedback to companies as they attempt to improve and fine-tune the environmental and social aspects of their projects. Unsurprisingly, the feedback provided by such groups varies considerably in quality—from timely and valuable to regrettably uninformed and lacking in useful insight. 

In some cases, NGOs may exaggerate the degree to which they represent communities or local stakeholders purportedly affected by proposed project activities. Nonetheless, meaningful interaction between NGOs and oil and gas companies quite often commences during formal public consultation activities and provides a baseline transparency tool for both company and civil society. Properly managed, communication about project activities allows companies one-time, ad-hoc, or regular insight regarding their reputation and the level of support/concern they have earned with stakeholders.

NGOs, particularly when they approach the consultation in a constructive manner, may achieve a primary goal: gaining a “seat at the table” or some degree of influence over decisions affecting environment and society. They may also help community members understand where project activities are or are not having an effect on their lives. However, this important and useful interaction may place the company in challenging positions, particularly regarding corporate influence, revenue, and transparency.

Financial Disclosure and Transparency

There is growing interest and challenge from NGOs and other stakeholders on issues that may lie beyond companies’ direct control and only within their limited influence. These include issues such as revenue management (how the host country spends the income from the company or sector) and how the presence of a business may affect host communities’ access to their basic human rights, such as freedom of expression or movement.

The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, launched in 2002 at the World Summit for Sustainable Development, is endorsed by 50 of the world’s largest oil, gas, and mining companies. It has established a new baseline of transparency and engagement regarding material oil, gas, and mining payments to governments. It is now possible for NGOs or other interested parties to access considerable amounts of information regarding projects and financial payments. 

Yet this successful focus on one side of the resource revenue equation—transfers to government—has been followed by an even more challenging civil society request: to enlist company support in helping pressure governments to account for how these resource revenues are being spent. As revenue disclosure continues to be a key issue for oil and gas companies, NGOs can be found playing myriad roles: challenging government and companies to be more transparent; facilitating dialogue between company, government, and civil society regarding revenue; and partnering with companies to design the means of disclosure. A similarly broad range of NGO roles exists regarding oil and gas companies’ community investment.

Community Development

As noted, NGOs can play a particularly useful role in helping communities and company representatives understand each other’s plans, interests, concerns, expectations, and priorities. This understanding is crucial to oil-and-gas-company-sponsored community development programs. Successful delivery of offshore and onshore projects often depends not only on exceptional engineering and project management, but also on the social license to operate (LTO) that is granted by host communities. Social LTO rests heavily on the degree to which companies manage their impacts, meet their obligations, and contribute to the growth of the community. Local community members often have substantial expectations regarding company-sponsored community initiatives. Management of such projects may fall beyond the expertise or resources of project staff. 

NGOs have come to play important roles in helping facilities and projects meet community development goals. As implementing partners, they may contract directly with companies to deliver development projects. They may also play an advisory role—helping both companies and community groups understand how to best employ oil and gas company resources and expertise in service of sustainable community development. They may advocate with local government and business community members to join oil and gas company community project initiatives and help build development economies of scale. NGOs can take on a facilitating role in helping community members understand how their local facility manages the environmental and safety-related aspects of its operations. They may even support dialogue between company and community about the roles that business can and cannot take on, helping to manage expectations. In such cases, NGOs begin to play the role of partner to both community and company.

NGO/Oil and Gas Company Partnership

Numerous examples exist of NGOs and companies moving beyond hostile interactions to models approaching partnership.

  • A major pipeline project saw NGOs taking on crucial financial and human rights consultations with landowners.
  • NGOs around the world have lent their expertise to small- and medium-enterprise development efforts specifically tuned to oil and gas supply chain requirements.
  • Cultural heritage partnerships have formed between projects and NGOs so that companies may implement their projects more efficiently without causing harm to archeological or cultural artifacts.
  • Social investment projects funded by oil and gas facilities but implemented by NGOs have provided useful means of developing a sense of local, multiactor partnership.
  • Environmental NGOs have assisted in impact management planning and implementation (e.g., spill response and cleanup) in host communities.
  • Community NGOs have helped deliver information about safety and environment on behalf of and alongside oil and gas facilities.

NGOs and oil and gas companies will often continue to have opposing interests, but the tension of balancing interests can be productive to those who understand and manage it well. The confrontational watchdog role favored by many NGO representatives has an important place in public discourse. Oil and gas companies are starting to learn how to make use of the valuable inputs that some NGOs provide to their projects. A growing cadre of NGOs recognizes that there are increasing opportunities for them to act as local partners and have real input and meaningful influence as major projects unfold. With the right guidance and commitment to open, productive relationships, one can reasonably hope that this trend—engagement for mutual advantage—will continue to gain momentum.


Reference

Tuodolo, F. 2009. Corporate Social Responsibility: Between Civil Society and the Oil Industry in the Developing World. ACME: An International E-Journal for Critical Geographies 8 (3): 530–541.