{"id":3396,"date":"2019-06-06T12:20:11","date_gmt":"2019-06-06T12:20:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/crigroup.com\/?post_type=blog&p=3396"},"modified":"2021-08-02T14:28:01","modified_gmt":"2021-08-02T14:28:01","slug":"oil-energy-companies-iso-37001","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/crigroup.com\/ar\/oil-energy-companies-iso-37001\/","title":{"rendered":"Oil and Energy Companies Look to ISO 37001"},"content":{"rendered":"
In December 2017, the world\u2019s largest builder of offshore rigs agreed to pay $422 million in penalties after entering a guilty plea for bribery charges connected with the Petroleo Brasileiro (Petrobras) scandal. Keppel Offshore & Marine Ltd. made illicit payments to both Petrobras officials and government representatives for more than a decade, between 2001 and 2014 (Reuters, 2017).\u00a0ISO 37001<\/span><\/p>\n The sweeping multimillion-dollar bribery scandal that rocked Petrobras led to numerous investor lawsuits and the downfall of disgraced government officials. It also served as the embodiment of the huge risk of bribery and corruption that confronts the entire oil and energy sector.<\/p>\n Such a scandal is less surprising when one considers the scale of the oil and energy sector. It is a massive portion of the world\u2019s economy, dealing mainly in petroleum \u2013 including upstream (exploration, development and production of crude oil or natural gas) and downstream (oil tankers, refiners, retailers and consumers) pipeline. As a raw material, petroleum is used for a number of chemical products, including pharmaceuticals, fertilisers, pesticides, solvents, and plastics.<\/p>\n The need to prospect, discover, and realise oil and energy production in various (and often far-flung) locations lends to the vulnerability to fraud \u2013 but geographic considerations aren\u2019t the only risk factors.\u00a0 Perhaps even more impactful is the complexity of business relationships required to operate in the industry \u2013 relationships with governments, contractors, regulators, investors\/venture partners, equipment suppliers and other parties. Every such interaction and dealing can be considered susceptible to bribery and corruption where cutting corners may be considered profitable or even perceived to be \u201cbusiness as usual.\u201d<\/p>\n Contributing to the risk is the volatile nature of oil and energy prices (along with all levels of the production chain), along with increasing global demand. This drives oil and energy companies to expand into new areas and markets that might carry a higher risk of bribery and corruption, including undeveloped, third-world countries with few controls, lax enforcement, or both. The reality, however, is that when bribery and corruption continues unabated, everyone loses \u2013 companies and governments are affected financially, and economic instability is increased.<\/p>\n There is a solution that oil and energy companies can implement to help prevent and detect bribery and corruption: the ISO 37001:2016 Anti-Bribery Management System<\/a> standard. The standard requires organisations to implement a series of procedures to prevent, detect and address bribery on a reasonable and proportionate basis according to the type and size of the organisation, and the nature and extent of bribery risks faced. It applies to small, medium and large organisations in the public and private sector and can be implemented in any country. Though it will not provide absolute assurance that bribery will completely cease, for organisations in the oil and energy sector that operate across global boundaries, this is a critical layer of protection that provides both anti-bribery controls and a system for compliance with various anti-corruption legislation, such as the FCPA and UK Bribery Act.<\/p>\nISO 37001 Anti-Bribery Management System standard <\/strong><\/h3>\n