Over 120.000 signatures against hydropower in the Balkans

++ Petition against the financing of dam projects in the Balkans signed by more than 120,000 people ++ Petition handed over to the EBRD in London yesterday by representatives of the Blue Heart campaign and the outdoor company Patagonia ++

Fidanka Bacheva-McGrath, Bankwatch; Theresa Schiller, EuroNatur; Ulrich Eichelmann, RiverWatch; Ryan Gellert, General Manager, Patagonia; Mihela Hladin Wolfe, Director of Environmental Initiatives, Patagonia in front of the ERBD headquarters in London

Representatives of the "Save the Blue Heart of Europe" campaign (f.l. Fidanka Bacheva-McGrath, Bankwatch; Theresa Schiller, EuroNatur; Ulrich Eichelmann, RiverWatch; Ryan Gellert, General Manager, Patagonia; Mihela Hladin Wolfe, Director of Environmental Initiatives, Patagonia) in front of the ERBD headquarters in London. In their hands: 120,000 signatures.

© Jason Alden/Patagonia
The Blue Heart Team hands over te signatures to Pierre Heilbronn, Vice President of the EBRD

Handing over of the petition to Pierre Heilbronn, Vice President of the EBRD. Never before has the EBRD received so many petition signatures on energy issues.

© Jason Alden/Patagonia
The Screaming Lady in the river Neretva in Bosnia

The "Screaming Lady" as symbol of resistance against hydropower in the Balkans. Here in the river Neretva in Bosnia & Herzegovina.

© Andrew Burr

London, Prague, Radolfzell, Vienna. Yesterday, representatives of the "Save the Blue Heart of Europe" campaign to save Europe’s last remaining wild rivers hand-delivered a petition endorsed globally by more than 120,000 people to high level executives at the London headquarters of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD).

The petition, which was launched in April 2018 as part of a wider global Save the Blue Heart of Europe campaign, calls on the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), European Investment Bank (EIB), and the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation (IFC) to halt their Balkan hydropower investments before the last wild rivers in Europe are irreversibly destroyed. Together, these institutions have funded at least 82 hydropower plants across the Balkans – of which 37 are located in protected areas – with EUR 724 million in total investments.

As economic trendsetters for activities in the region, the development banks have been followed into hydropower investment by commercial lenders, including, among others, Austria’s Erste and Italy’s Unicredit, which have funded at least 158 hydropower plants.

The campaign is calling on banks to immediately stop funding for projects that are located in protected areas and other valuable rivers stretches, apply more stringent green conditions to loans in the sector. It is also urging them to increase funding for energy efficiency and other renewable energy sources, most of all sola – a potential which remains largely untapped in the region.

Fidanka McGrath, EBRD policy officer for Bankwatch, said: “The EBRD prides itself on moving markets, so we hope the bank will take the public’s call to heart and drive investments in a more diverse mix of renewables, while also applying strict environmental and social safeguards.”

Theresa Schiller, campaigner of the Blue Heart Campaign at EuroNatur, said: “International banks such as the EBRD must face up to their responsibilities in times of climate change and overexploitation of natural resources. We call on the EBRD to withdraw from financing hydropower on Balkan rivers in order to preserve this unique European natural heritage.”

Yvon Chouinard, Founder of Patagonia, said: “It’s a waste of money and a moral travesty that some of the world’s largest financial institutions have embraced this outdated and exploitative technology and are financing dams in some of the last wild places in Europe.”

Ulrich Eichelmann, Coordinator of the Blue Heart Campaign and CEO of Riverwatch, said, “It is a shame that the EBRD and other financial institutions are fueling the destruction of the most valuable rivers in Europe, leading to biodiversity loss, social grievances and deterioration of protected areas. They must stop investing in the dam tsunami and rather act as a role model for other investors by funding more actual renewables – such as solar –  instead of hydropower. “

Background information:

Further information:

Fidanka Bacheva-McGrath, CEE Bankwatch Network, EBRD policy officer
fidankab(at)bankwatch.org,  +359 899 876 095

Cornelia Wieser, Save the Blue Heart campaign coordinator, Riverwatch
Cornelia.wieser(at)riverwatch.eu, +43 650 4544784

Anja Arning, Public Relations, EuroNatur
anja.arning(at)euronatur.org, +49 7732 927213

Louise Brierley-Ingham, PR manager, Patagonia Europe
Louise.b(at)patagonia.com, +31 613 344 608
 

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