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How Rising Powers Create Governance Gaps: The Case of Export Credit and the Environment

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  • Kristen Hopewell

Abstract

This article analyzes how rising powers are affecting an important area of global governance at the intersection of trade and environment: export credit. State-backed export credit agencies (ECAs) play a major role in financing large infrastructure and energy projects, particularly in developing countries. Many of these projects carry significant environmental implications, yet there has been little scholarly attention to their governance. Since the 1990s, global governance of the environmental practices of ECAs has been progressively expanded and strengthened via the OECD Arrangement on export credit and Common Approaches for environmental and social due diligence. Recently, however, there has been a dramatic increase in export credit provision by rising powers, such as India and China, who are not members of the OECD nor subject to the Arrangement or Common Approaches. In this article, I argue that existing governance mechanisms have not caught up with the rapidly changing landscape of export credit. Drawing on the case of India’s financing for the Rampal coal-fired power plant in Bangladesh, I show that the problem of environmental governance for export credit increasingly extends beyond the advanced-industrialized states of the OECD. The failure to cover the large and growing volume of export credit provided by the emerging powers represents a major gap in the established system of environmental governance for export credit.

Suggested Citation

  • Kristen Hopewell, 2019. "How Rising Powers Create Governance Gaps: The Case of Export Credit and the Environment," Global Environmental Politics, MIT Press, vol. 19(1), pages 34-52, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:tpr:glenvp:v:19:y:2019:i:1:p:34-52
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    Cited by:

    1. Dirk-Jan Koch, 2022. "Do transactions to tax havens and corruption attract officially supported export credit? Evidence from three European export credit agencies," SN Business & Economics, Springer, vol. 2(6), pages 1-21, June.
    2. Ganna Stoyatska, 2020. "Perspectives on the strategic partnership for the protection of human rights and the problem of using digital personal data," Technium Social Sciences Journal, Technium Science, vol. 8(1), pages 579-582, June.
    3. Andreas Klasen & Roseline Wanjiru & Jenni Henderson & Josh Phillips, 2022. "Export finance and the green transition," Global Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science, vol. 13(5), pages 710-720, November.
    4. Chen, Xu & Li, Zhongshu & Gallagher, Kevin P. & Mauzerall, Denise L., 2021. "Financing carbon lock-in in developing countries: Bilateral financing for power generation technologies from China, Japan, and the United States," Applied Energy, Elsevier, vol. 300(C).
    5. repec:thr:techub:1008:y:2020:i:1:p:579-582 is not listed on IDEAS
    6. Jessica C. Liao, 2021. "The Club‐based Climate Regime and OECD Negotiations on Restricting Coal‐fired Power Export Finance," Global Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science, vol. 12(1), pages 40-50, February.

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