Chevron’s Environmental Disaster in Ecuador
I grew up with family tales about the unique beauty of Ecuador. My father's family made their living on tourism in the Andes, the Galapagos, and the Amazon. Sadly, what was to us a mysterious and majestic example of the wonder of creation was merely a dumping ground to Texaco. They chose to discard 18 billion gallons of toxic waste into the pristine rainforest, poisoning its people.
Texaco left Ecuador in 1992, not long after I finished college, and in their wake was left the worst oil related disaster on the planet. That damage is still there today. Mere weeks ago I stood in front of a toxic waste pit, decades old and yet only a few feet from the home of a family of campesinos. Told the area was cleaned and safe, they bought the land and built their home there. Families like that one have lost more than Chevron, or anyone else, can ever repay.
I found it impossible to witness such a horrific site in contrast to the beauty of the rainforest and not be changed. As much as the smell turns my stomach so does the knowledge that Texaco admitted to dumping it, yet refuses to accept responsibility.
Of course, the affected communities are demanding justice from the company that caused the damage. It's actually a very simple case. There's a massive murder weapon, 30,000 victims and a motive -- profit.
Some Texaco executive, who most likely never set foot in the Amazon, nor ever met any of the indigenous people whose territory Texaco invaded with helicopters and massive machinery, made the cold calculation that saving $3 per barrel was worth the destruction of this part of the rainforest. It still gives me chills to read the 1972 memo from Texaco describing their policy of hiding spills and destroying records.
In fact, every decision that has been made from the very first one to drill has been made to choose profit over people and the environment. Decisions that took only the shortest-term impacts into consideration, yet decisions that would wreak havoc on the world's oldest and largest forest. The toxic waste pits sit there, apparently stagnant, but all the while leaching toxins into the rivers and streams of the Amazon.
Meanwhile, Chevron's decisions to try to cover up its liability continue unchanged, knowing all the while that the resulting inaction means the continued poisoning of entire communities.
The 60 Minutes story that aired this past Sunday has ripped another layer off of Chevron's attempts to bury and ignore this story, like the truly festering wound that it is. The resulting publicity has wiped out much of Chevron's efforts to deceive the financial markets and the general public. I listened to a recent Chevron shareholder call and one of the very first analyst's questions was about the case, it was prefaced with "I know you are not going to be happy about this next question..." Have you seen the internet traffic since Sunday? Chevron is really unhappy this week.
Watching Chevron's strategy in the face of the overwhelming facts and growing awareness is as uncomfortable as watching Chevron spokesperson Sylvia Garrigo compare drinking contaminated water with wearing makeup (a tip for Ms. Garrigo: your cosmetics may very well be harming you, please visit www.safecosmetics.org to learn more). Yet Chevron's executives continue to deny and delay. Time is running out for them and the lies they hide behind (to read Chevron's top ten lies about this case look here). They are learning the hard way that hiding a potential $27 billion dollar liability is just as impossible as hiding 18 billion gallons of toxic waste.
The ease at which Chevron's CEO David O'Reilly (who also happens to be the Chair of the Board) has apparently kept his board in the dark is amazing. Yet, last year that plan came crashing down around him like Bernie Madoff's scheme when O'Reilly was force to disclose to shareholders that it faced a potential liability in the billions in Ecuador.
How does the board of directors miss the hypocrisy of Chevron's "Will You Join Us" ad campaign, asking others to join THEM in making sound environmental and energy efficient choices, while their CEO refuses to seek a real solution to this quagmire? I suppose that is to be expected from a company which bought Texaco without even demanding a master list of all its toxic dump sites in Ecuador (as we learned courtesy of 60 Minutes).
In this economic climate, Chevron's board must realize that they can on longer afford to operate with such poor governance. Their wound is bleeding even more deeply into the social consciousness and Chevron is becoming the poster child for lack of corporate accountability. Today, even the Attorney General of the State of New York is asking tough questions of Chevron.
As my own son grows up I will share with him the same stories of the sacred and timeless beauty of the Amazon. I am confident he will learn from a young age the lesson with which Chevron still grapples. One can only hide from their mistakes for so long, each day you delay facing up to them brings with it a heavier cost, so don't wait until you find that the whole world is at your doorstep demanding justice.
Paul Paz y Miño is the Managing Director of Amazon Watch which works to defend the rainforest and advance the rights of indigenous peoples in the Amazon Basin.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllIs it any wonder the world hates us?
snydly
Corporations are required by the terms of their charters to do things like this.
Read "Unequal Protection" by Thom Hartmann; read John Perkins "Confessions, and Korten's "When Corp Rule the World".
The top 1% is ruining our world and the Corporation is the horse they rode in on.
STRIP CORPORATIONS OF LEGAL "PERSONHOOD"!!
AND read the classic "The Corporation," by Joel Bakan.
... ASS_ETS nailed to the wall...
The history of banality and self importance of the golems that demand that existance be the void they blindly manifest between their ...whatever...that is forwarded in the paradigm can only be called the dying of the necrotocracy. People are waking up - all over the world...
i got rid of the car two years ago, buying local, used, only necessities and by God it feels GOOD!
this corporation and most other corporations are literally psychopathic
they are serial killers on steroids
no concern for others
no conscience
liars
scum
very disturbing but banal in that it is the typical of corporations
not only american corporations
unfortunately they own the media, the politicians, the banks
it is good to hear that people are watching less and less tv news
papers are dying - good fucking riddance
warts and porn notwithstanding the internet has provided folks with new ways of organizing themselves
new ways of getting information
this is alarming for the controllers - they prefer medicated and disjointed sheeple watching oj and american idol
hope chevron gets its ass nailed to the wall
let the other corporations check this shit out - there is more of this coming
ask not for whom the bell tolls
"unfortunately they own the media, the politicians, the banks"
Don't forget the judiciary. Did you hear about the recent asbestos-related decision in favor of W.R. Grace? (I saw it on "Democracy Now!"). I am hoping Obama's pick for the Supreme Court will not be blindly biased pro-corporate.
Nice to see the docs on this, and bravo to whoever was involved in providing it.
Sioux Rose
NAMASTE: Glad I'm not the only one able to decipher the prevalent sign language that reveals so much about so many things. Thanks for this posting. I can hardly form words when I see the atrocities commited against nature, the most sacred sanctuaries, pristine portions of the great Mother.
Years ago in a sci-fi I wrote based on the year 2020... the remaining rain forests were kept as sacred sanctuaries, places persons would go to remain in silence so that they could reclaim lost portions of themselves and gently (as well as naturally) heal. I called those regions the Sacred Temple Pods. When ignorance is empowered with gigantic machinery and toxic weapons, ALL suffer. There is a holocaust against the natural world, and much of it is based on the created-need to acquire things and/or subjugate a people to obtain their resources. Yet as the glaciers dry up, as sources of indigenous water disappear, what then? What is the price of water when there is not a drop to drink? Of course the dark, disgusting elites have already figured this into the calculus of their diabolical fiscal equations.
S I O U X R O S E,
You likely already know this, but I must reiterate the subtly twists of _ M A R S _ R U L E S _.
A chevron is actually an ancient symbol used extensively in the military, which up-righteously represents the male power, domination, and of course penis.
. . . . . . ^
. . . . . / /\ \
. . . . / /. .\ \
The more chevrons that one is allowed to wear, the "bigger" the rank & similarly for the member's power ( apparently also size ), to DICKtate the action of all of the other lessor and smaller chevrons … and so it goes.
RHIP = rank has it's privileges.
CHEVRON is literally and figuratively up raising it's dick and saying, you are nothing compared to me.
_____ Now cutting CHEVRON down to size,
_____ is going to make many men
_____ cross their legs in vicarious affect.
The highest corporate size is measured as "profit", so decisively ( latin cut = cis ) diminishing otherwise increasing hard profits, is likely quite a big point and causing waves of shock to mark down, and drive the spike into the board of dictators.
Oh the loss of their prideful MANifesto, they're feeling so MANipulated, MANiacal, unMANageable, being MANhandled so, that they MANifest MANy MANners of insufficiencies and insecurities.
Oh what is the equivalent of de-individualizing CHEVRON's corporate identity and neutering it's personality ?
{ S N I P }
Namaste
If Chevron claims it has personhood under the law, then it should face the same penalties a person would under the law.
Strip Chevron of all assets. Dismantle it in order to pay for these damages. EXECUTE it for mass murder.
Considering Chevron was a party to the Burma legal case which reaffirmed the right of the state where the enterprise's articles of incorporation are filed to revoke them: the continued malfeasance of its' executives regarding its' more dubious non-US operations indicates an all too cushy relationship with those charged to oversee them. Expecting this to be the case as well in Ecuador could well be their downfall in this case.
As the 60 Minutes piece detailed, Chevron has wound up in an Ecuadorian court due to their own miscalculation and may very rightly be on the hook for a large judgment. As money and power seem to be the only things corporate bad actors like Chevron respect, they are quite due for a serious rebuke.
Bring America Back !!!! Could you put a comments screen on for the Nader
article below this one, thank you.
America is exactly the sum of its atrocities.
I will be glad when it's finally gone for good.