Public Energy Financing Overseas Archives

Public Energy Financing Overseas

The U.S. government has spent more than $44 billion on fossil fuel projects overseas over the last decade. From fracking projects in Argentina to liquified natural gas development in Mozambique, this finance has not only resulted in pollution and environmental degradation, but displacement, violent conflict and human rights abuses.

Public finance flows through several different types of institutions like multilateral development banks, bilateral development banks, export credit agencies. These are all organizations that collect, invest, and distribute our public funds (aka tax dollars).

As part of our international sustainable finance campaign, we track government-backed institutions that fund energy projects overseas. Our campaign works to end public financing of fossil fuels, to give a voice to affected communities, and to push institutions to responsibly invest public money in renewable energy.

LEARN MORE

LEARN MORE

Latest News See All
Climate Activists Mark President Ajay Banga’s Bullish First Year

Friends of the Earth U.S. and partners marked Ajay Banga’s first year as president of the World Bank Group by exposing the Wall Street ties that are stymieing climate action at the financial institution.

U.S. blocks clean energy transition with outsized fossil fuel support

The United States and a handful of other bad actors are blocking a just transition to renewable energy with continued and outsized financial support for fossil fuels.

Export-Import Bank Votes to Proceed with Bahrain Project Financing in Closed-Door Process

Today the board of directors at the United States Export-Import Bank voted to notify Congress about potential financing for fossil fuel expansion in Bahrain.

Latest Blog Posts See All
How Institutions like the World Bank Group Finance Fossil Fuels 
How Institutions like the World Bank Group Finance Fossil Fuels 

The World Bank Group's mission is to end extreme poverty and promote shared prosperity on a livable planet. 

A Risky Bet: The IMF’s Role in Mozambique’s LNG Development
A Risky Bet: The IMF’s Role in Mozambique’s LNG Development

Serious financial, social, environmental, and climate risks aside, the development of LNG in Mozambique has also been tangled up in a corruption scandal of international scale, and a devastating militarized conflict impacting over a million people.

The hidden flows of finance to fossil fuels: World Bank and IMF edition
The hidden flows of finance to fossil fuels: World Bank and IMF edition

The U.S. government has spent more than $44 billion on fossil fuel projects overseas over the last decade.

Resources See All
  • Letter to EXIM on Trafigura
    Download
  • Still Misguided: The US continues to support oil & gas projects at the World Bank Group
    Learn More
  • FOIA Response: Recommendations from EXIM Climate Council
    Download