The Norwegian insurance company Storebrand has blacklisted both phosphate and oil companies involved in occupied Western Sahara. Among them are the French company Total, which are now back in from the cold after they withdrew from the territory.
Storebrand, among the larger life insurance and pension savings companies in Norway, has divested from three phosphate companies importing phosphates from Western Sahara. It had also, until recently, divested from Total, due to its exploration of hydrocarbons in the territory.
For the first time, Storebrand has published a list of companies which they have excluded from its investment universe of ethical considerations. The exclusion list was published a few months ago, but was until recently not known for WSRW. Storebrand has for a number of years had a highly active in-house department of ethics which has assessed the social responsibility of its investments.
On the published list, there are four companies that were excluded due to involvement in Western Sahara: the French oil company Total, as well as the three phosphate importers Agrium, PotashCorp, and Incitec Pivot.
A representative of Storebrand confirmed to Western Sahara Resource Watch that all four exclusions were due to Western Sahara involvement. It was also stated that the exclusion of Total was reversed after the French multinational decided to withdraw its involvement in Western Sahara in December 2015.
The list also shows the exclusion of the Swiss company Glencore. This is not due to its licences in Western Sahara, but other involvements internationally. «However, its involvement in Western Sahara has been taken note of and will be dealt with if the company tidies up the other issues», the representative stated.
After Total withdrew from further work in the territory, the remaining oil companies on stock exchange active in Western Sahara are Kosmos Energy, Cairn Energy, Glencore PLC and San Leon Energy. An increasing number of investors are questioning the involvement of exploration of oil in Western Sahara, which the UN Legal Counsel found to be in violation of international law.
Until the publication of the Storebrand exclusion list, it has not been known which companies Storebrand had refrained from investing in. The published list is of 3rd quarter 2015, while future updated lists are expected to be published regularly here.
Already in 2002, shortly after Morocco issued its first oil licences in Western Sahara, did Storebrand actively engage in the matter of Western Sahara. Storebrand was at the time one of the major shareholders of the Norwegian seismic survey company TGS-Nopec which mapped the seafloor of Western Sahara for Total and Kerr-McGee. Storebrand threatened to withdraw from the company unless it pulled out of Western Sahara. At a Storebrand seminar on Corporate Social Responsibility in 2003, even the then deputy minister of Foreign Affairs, Vidar Helgesen, who is now he Norwegian minister for EU affairs, underlined the problematic aspects of TGS-Nopec's oil exploration in Western Sahara. The pressure from Storebrand at TGS-Nopec was successful, and TGS-Nopec pulled out. Ever since, Storebrand has been following the issue, and now its conclusions are out in the public domain.
Two more Norwegians, who travelled to occupied Western Sahara to learn about Morocco’s controversial energy projects in the territory, were detained by Moroccan police this afternoon and deported.
Today, 25 Moroccan police officers showed up to expel two Norwegians from occupied Western Sahara. The two had traveled to learn what the Sahrawis think about Morocco's controversial renewable energy projects on occupied land.
Sahrawi civil society welcomes a new report from the UN Committee on Enforced Disappearance, and urges exhumations and identification of victims in the Morocco-occupied Western Sahara.
This week, Morocco is for the first time placed under review in the UN Committee on Enforced Disappearances.