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WIKILEAKS: FORBES ENERGY CITES CORRUPTION IN ETHANOL PROJECT
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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin

08SANTODOMINGO1371 2008-08-29 15:03 2010-12-17 21:09 CONFIDENTIAL Embassy Santo Domingo

VZCZCXYZ0001

RR RUEHWEB



DE RUEHDG #1371/01 2421508

ZNY CCCCC ZZH

R 291508Z AUG 08

FM AMEMBASSY SANTO DOMINGO

TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 1359

INFO RUEHZA/WHA CENTRAL AMERICAN COLLECTIVE

RUEHPU/AMEMBASSY PORT AU PRINCE 4854

C O N F I D E N T I A L SANTO DOMINGO 001371



SIPDIS



E.O. 12958: DECL: 08/27/2018

TAGS: ECON ENRG KCOR EINV DR

SUBJECT: FORBES ENERGY CITES CORRUPTION IN ETHANOL PROJECT

DELAYS



REF: A. STATE 85047

¶B. SANTO DOMINGO 1353



Classified By: Ambassador PRFannin for Reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)



¶1. (C) SUMMARY. Executives with Forbes Energy met with the

Ambassador regarding the company,s planned USD 700 million

sugarcane ethanol project straddling the Dominican

Republic-Haiti border. They said that while they have

already obtained all needed permits for the project, which

will be based in Manzanillo, Montecristi, Dominican Republic,

they continue to face unnecessary delays and moving goalposts

that they interpret as prompts for bribes from government

officials. They also described two overt solicitations from

high-level officials for cash payments. The project is

currently held up due to delays in finalizing a negotiated

land swap with a state entity; the Ambassador has sent a

letter to the top official of this entity requesting a status

update. END SUMMARY.



¶2. (U) On August 28, the Ambassador met with Forbes Group CEO

Lucien Forbes, Director of External Relations Josh Fenton,

and Chief Legal Counsel D. Edward Wilson . Also present were

DCM Bullen, EconChief, PAO, EconOff and FCSO. The meeting

followed a July 31, 2008 meeting between the company and WHA

Assistant Secretary Shannon (ref A).



¶3. (U) The Forbes executives said that the company has been

working since 2006 to establish operations in the northern

border region to produce ethanol from sugarcane stock

primarily for export to the U.S. market. Initially, the

plant would denature Brazilian &wet8 ethanol for the United

States. Subsequently, the company will produce ethanol from

locally-grown sugarcane stock for the domestic and export

markets as well as generate 50 MW of electricity from bagasse

(sugarcane waste) for sale to the Dominican electricity grid.

The major part of the project will operate under the Special

Duty-Free Zone tax incentive regime. The local affiliate of

the company, Forbes Energy Dominicana, S.A., has already

received a 20-year renewable permit for a duty-free zone.

The executives said that this will be one of the largest

private investments ever in the country and the largest

commercial venture of its kind in the world.



¶4. (U) The project would also impact Haiti. While the ethanol

and electricity production will all take place in the

Dominican Republic, Forbes plans to either cultivate land

that it buys or else buy feedstock from Haitian producers

directly across the border from its Dominican assets. Forbes

said he aims to make the project fully operable with an

entirely Haitian-Dominican workforce within five years of

launch.



¶5. (SBU) Although the Forbes executives said that the company

has obtained all necessary permits to begin the project and

negotiated a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) for the sale of

electricity to the local grid, they are awaiting the

signature of Radhames Segura, the executive vice president of

the Dominican Corporation of State Electrical Companies

(CDEEE), on a land-swap agreement. Although Segura has told

Forbes that &It,s done8, weeks have passed without a

signed agreement.



¶6. (C) The executives said they feel that Segura is moving

the goalposts in an attempt to prompt a personal payment for

him to facilitate the project,s completion, but noted that

he has never directly solicited a bribe. &He knows this is

costing me money,8 Forbes said. Fenton said that the

company would absolutely not pay any bribes and asked the

Ambassador to support this position. The executives also

mentioned two overt requests for bribes from senior GoDR

officials. Forbes said that at the end of 2007 the former

Minister of Tourism Felix Jimenez offered to get all

necessary permits in exchange for USD 10 million. (Note:

Jimenez was removed from his post on August 16 in the

inauguration cabinet reshuffle (ref B ). However, Jimenez

recently told the CONGEN that he was going to be the next

Ambassador to Washington after he improves his English. End

Note.) They also noted a similarly explicit request for cash

from an assistant to the Secretary of Defense whose name they

did not recall.



¶7. (C) Forbes also described the project as a victim of a

political rivalry between Segura and Juan Temistocles Montas,

the Secretary of Economy, Development and Planning. He

criticized the Fernandez administration,s inability to

transcend the personal impasse between these two officials,

both of whom are rumored to have presidential ambitions. He

said that while &the problem is Radhames Segura8, he

wondered whether the true holdup lies with the President

himself. He urged the Ambassador to make contacts with key

GoDR officials on the company,s behalf.



¶8. (SBU) The Ambassador told Forbes that he appreciated the

corruption-related challenges that the company is facing in

the Dominican Republic, and described USG efforts to combat

the government corruption at the institutional level through

USAID programs and other efforts. The Ambassador agreed to

write a letter to Segura inquiring into the status of the

land swap agreement. The letter was sent on August 28.



¶9. (C) COMMENT. While the corruption issues that Forbes

raised are not new or surprising, it was disturbing to hear

of the audacity of certain GoDR officials in offering their

assistance in exchange for large bribes. It is even more

worrisome that Post has now heard from two different sources

that Jimenez could be appointed as the next Ambassador to the

U.S. Post will consider whether to request a revocation of

Jimenez's visa for corruption and looks forward to

coordinating with the Department on whether to accept

agreement for the former minister if he is nominated as

Ambassador to the U.S. END COMMENT.

FANNIN


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