I heard about this nearly 3 weeks ago (thanks to Google Alerts...) and was waiting to see if Kiva would be making its own announcement, maybe on the blog, or perhaps on the
corporate supporters page , to reveal that Kiva is now amongst the non-profits supported by
Chevron (the world's 4th largest oil company by revenue), and specifically by their
Chevron in California community involvement initiative.
Since nearly 3 weeks have gone by I assume Kiva doesn't intend to generate any publicity of its own around this, so in the interests of transparency about Kiva's funding sources, here's the story:
Chevron's press release Chevron Announces California Partnership to Invest in Education and Jobs
Kiva.org, Project Lead the Way and Other Nonprofits Offer Innovative Approaches to Economic and Social Challenges
SAN RAMON, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 21, 2009-- Chevron Corporation (NYSE: CVX) today announced the California Partnership, an initiative to invest in education and economic development in its home state. Under the new initiative, Chevron will expand and deepen its partnerships with nonprofits focused on supporting underserved communities, including relationships with 18 new nonprofit partners providing programs for education, entrepreneurs and job training. Additional partners will be introduced throughout the remainder of 2009.
. . .
Chevron’s California Partnership will also be supporting Kiva.org, the world’s first person-to-person micro-lending website that allows individuals to make small loans to entrepreneurs online. Chevron is making a contribution to Kiva.org to assist in funding the organization’s operations as they continue to build their innovative microfinancing platform, which is already available to California small businesses and entrepreneurs.
“California small businesses and entrepreneurs are facing unprecedented difficulty in obtaining necessary business funding in this economic slowdown, which can be the key to job creation and overall economic growth for the state,” said Premal Shah, president of Kiva.org. “Chevron’s support through the California Partnership will help Kiva.org continue to spur growth in small businesses, which represent more than 87 percent of all businesses in the U.S.”
. . .
Chevron announced the California Partnership at an event in San Francisco on Wednesday morning. As part of the event, Chevron hosted a panel discussing innovative approaches to public-private partnerships featuring Chevron nonprofit partners Kiva.org, DonorsChoose.org, Project Lead the Way and Teach for America. A video of the discussion will be available online at:
www.chevron.com/CA .
(the video is not there yet) the press attending the San Francisco event referred to above included prolific Oakland videoblogger (etc) Zennie Abraham (a.k.a. zennie62), here's his video report from that event (I'm just about going to forgive him for getting Kiva's web address wrong in the introduction). Watch for a short explanation of Kiva from Premal at around 1:40, and that's followed later right at the end by a quick interview with the founder of DonorsChoose.org.
zennie62's blog report here: http://www2.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/abraham/detail?blogid=95&entry_id=51194 includes a fuller list of the other Chevron beneficiaries. I haven't yet been able to discover exactly how much Chevron's support is worth to Kiva. Reading around the stated figures, and the number of non-profit partners Chevron has announced already (but it might announce more later this year), I would hazard a guess that this might be worth somewhere between a quarter to half a million dollars to Kiva, which will make it a very big deal indeed in terms of supporting Kiva's operating costs and enabling them to reach more MFIs. Kiva's Field Partner Opportunity Fund (based in San Jose) is by the way another of the newly-announced Chevron beneficiaries.
If it is at the sort of level I think it is, I wonder why Kiva has not made an announcement of its own? Could it be that there's a feeling within Kiva that accepting money from "big oil" is something that a quite significant proportion of Kiva lenders would feel somewhat uneasy about? It's probably fair to say that Chevron as a brand, and oil extraction as an activity, are not generally known for generating warm fuzzy feelings
(*) ... However, if Kiva is taking the dollars, I do think that the familiar Chevron logo should be up there on the corporate supporters page, along with Google, PayPal, Ernst & Young, Yahoo and all the others. And i think that in common with previous significant grant support from corporations, transparency requires that Kiva should make an early announcement of how much Chevron is contributing to Kiva's operating expenses.
Peter
(*) I checked this forum for previous mentions of Chevron. They were universally negative:Judy's post about "Crude," a standout Sundance documentary about a legal battle between oil giant Chevron and rainforest dwellers in Ecuador more discussion on Chevron and environmental disaster for Ecuador beginning here in the MIFEX thread In the Burma thread, mention by me of Chevron's involvement with Total in helping to shore up the illegitimate regime of the military junta, here. edit: added videoblogger Zennie Abraham's name.