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Karen Hinton

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From Ecuador to Richmond to Nigeria, Chevron Flouts Safety, Lacks Respect for Communities Where It Operates

Posted: 08/13/2012 7:56 pm

Want to understand the back story for Chevron's latest environmental disaster in Richmond, California?

Read this article about how Chevron essentially forced 154 of its Nigerian workers to jump from a smoking oil rig minutes before it exploded into the ocean after the company refused to evacuate them. Then, watch this video about Chevron's devastating human rights violations and fraudulent cover-up in Ecuador.

It has been clear for some time that a deep cultural rot has taken hold in Chevron's management team. The company is riddled by an outdated corporate governance structure designed to maintain a weak-kneed board of directors incapable of policing managers who don't care to address fundamental operational and safety problems. (See this press release and an article about Chevron's being named a company with some of the worst business practices in the U.S.)

For Chevron, it's about pure greed and lies. Its marketing mantra -- we respect the communities where we operate -- is an advertising industry joke.

Chevron CEO John Watson and General Counsel R. Hewitt Pate -- a disciple of Karl Rove -- both of whom are hopelessly conflicted on these issues are being paid huge amounts of money to make sure Chevron continues to pad its pockets at the expense of the communities where it operates.

On recent conference calls with analysts who provide information to shareholders, Watson repeatedly misrepresented and distorted the facts about the $19 billion damage award in Ecuador. He has called the case a fraud and the Ecuadorians "criminals" -- basically blaming the victims, the usual tactic of Chevron's top brass.

The disaster at Chevron's refinery in Richmond -- where over 1,000 people were sent to the hospital because of toxic fumes -- is another case in point. As Richmond community leader Andres Soto said on Democracy Now!, Chevron is engaging is more "mendacity" and "misrepresentation of the truth":

"Realistically, what we have seen is nothing but spin out of the refinery. On the one hand they apologized to the community (that's) how they always lead their statements off. But, realistically, they came out and they were blaming the same community and the environmentalists for them not being able to modernize and upgrade their operations there at the Richmond refinery when in fact, we know that this unit, the crude unit that actually caught on fire and blew up, it was never part of that upgrade program.

They could have ensured the safety of this thing in general. But it is that mendacity, the misrepresentation of the truth that Chevron is engaging in that makes it very difficult to deal with them. They refuse to negotiate in good faith with the committee over a wide range of issues, whether it is fair taxation or whether it's environmental safety and environmental justice." (emphasis mine)

Children in Richmond living in poverty and in the shadow of Chevron's antiquated refinery already are hospitalized for asthma at almost twice the rate of children in the rest of Contra Costa County.

In Ecuador, the eight-year trial produced overwhelming scientific evidence that Chevron deliberately dumped more than 16 billions of gallons of toxic waste into Amazon waterways and abandoned more than 900 toxic waste pits that have pipes to funnel oil sludge into streams and rivers used by indigenous groups for their drinking water. Thousands of died of cancer, or are at risk of dying.

In most countries, those responsible would be prosecuted for homicide. But in Ecuador, Chevron stripped its assets from the country and simply refuses to pay the judgment - essentially challenging the Ecuadorians to chase it around the world to seize various assets. (The Ecuadorians have launched legal actions to seize Chevron assets in Canada and Brazil already.)

But that's not all. The rot in Chevron is so extreme that the same pattern of polluting local communities and then lying about it has appeared in numerous other places: See this report for details.

· In Brazil, Chevron faces a $22 billion liability and possible criminal penalties for an offshore spill and related cover-up last November in the Frade field, a $3.6 billion deep water oil project that is one of Chevron's biggest capital investments in the world.

· In Angola, the impacts of oil activity in the Sea of Cabinda are so disastrous that most of the sand on the shores is polluted and black in color, and most of the beaches cannot be used.

· In Salt Lake City, a rupture of a Chevron pipeline dumped over 33,000 gallons of oil into Red Butte Creek, exposing residents to oil fumes with horrific health impacts. A second rupture occurred just five months later, dumping an additional 21,000 gallons of oil.

· In Canada, Chevron is undertaking a major expansion of its tar sands projects. Increasing evidence demonstrates that Chevron's development is contaminating the environment with toxins and severely impacting the health, livelihood and cultural preservation of indigenous communities living downstream.

· In Kazakhstan, Chevron's development of the giant Tengiz Field emitted such high levels of toxins that the country's government fined the operation nearly $64 million.

·In Indonesia, a Chevron pipeline explosion covered part of a village in hot crude oil, leaving two children suffering burn wounds and a community devastated.

These debacles happened on the watch of CEO Watson and General Counsel Pate. How rotten is Chevron? Pate just received a 75% raise (to $7.8 million per year) for getting the company to act like a fugitive from justice on the Ecuador case. Watson's compensation last year was on the order of $25 million. See here.

Countries around the world should simply cease doing further business with Chevron until it respects the communities where it operates and begins to obey local laws and court judgments. By any measure, the Richmond disaster is only the latest illustration of why this company has lost its social license to operate.

Karen Hinton is president of Hinton Communications. She serves as the U.S. spokesperson for the Ecuadorians suing Chevron for oil contamination.

 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aesops
Appearances often are deceiving
12:29 AM on 08/16/2012
"Read this article about how Chevron essentially forced 154 of its Nigerian workers to jump from a smoking oil rig minutes before it exploded into the ocean after the company refused to evacuate them."

The author mischaracterizes the event. Chevron insists that there was no order to jump off the combusting rig. The workers voluntarily ran and cannonballed into the ocean. It's all part of Chevron's "human energy" initiative. The workers were using a renewable form energy, known in the industry as "sheer terror", to save themselves. Chevron hopes to continue to develop this kind of energy in populations around the world.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aesops
Appearances often are deceiving
12:16 AM on 08/16/2012
Is it just me (and it might be), but where is the news coverage for this explosion in Redmond California that supposedly made so many people ill and warranted people sealing their homes up? Except for the actual day of the explosion, I have seen basically nothing in the mainstream media about it. Maybe I wasn't looking hard enough. Seems like kind of a big story.
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
06:40 PM on 08/15/2012
It's weird. We need to stop acting like the spectators of the Emperor's new clothes. The most expert climate scientist I know of, Jim Hansen, says we MUST bring CO2 emissions down to 350 parts per million (PPM). We're now at 400 PPM. Does anyone really believe we have a ghost of a chance of bringing CO2 down under the current international order? Anyone?

We all say that we need to get off fossil fuels. Can we be serious???? How? And how can we get off fossil fuels if we keep approving NEW FOSSIL EXPLORATION? I bet Chevron has many new projects in the pipeline. But this is ridiculous!!!!! To stop something, to get away from it, you must first stop adding to it! We can't possibly be serious about getting off fossil if we keep drilling and digging for more.

No more drilling. Full stop. Let the oil companies clean up their mess and run safe operations. But rather than have a complete and permanent cessation right away, a prudent first step is a 5 year moratorium on new operations. Anything less is a joke.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aesops
Appearances often are deceiving
12:31 AM on 08/16/2012
That would plunge the world into utter chaos though. so that is a bit untenable. How about we just cut all government support to them first and let the operate in the "free market."
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
09:21 AM on 08/16/2012
I don't know how any of these "wild ideas" can work out. I'm not even aware of all the issues, or what would "plunge the world into utter chaos." The world is too complicated for that. So I'm thankful for the input of others. I like what you say, in that there is a PRACTICAL prospect of undoing subsidies for fossils. Even the president is proposing it. So, yes, it is a good first move. But getting CO2 emissions down might require a change of mindset as to what the world can and needs to do without. The status quo has us in an extremely deep crisis.
02:54 AM on 08/15/2012
To understand the sleaze-side of Chevron, see, www.truecostofchevron.com.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
shewolf2002
EDUCATION is a national security issue.
11:16 AM on 08/14/2012
Typical cowboy capitalism. Just another day at the office, lining their pockets before they move on to another management/board position at another corporation somewhere.
11:13 AM on 08/14/2012
I wish I could boycott every greedy company that treats it's workers like garbage. Unfortunately then I'd have no gas to put in my car.
10:12 AM on 08/14/2012
Too many Corporations have turned into criminals. A corporation can't be charged with a crime and put in prison - they can only be fined. The fines don't cut into shareholder profits enough to make the shareholders demand a change in management - in fact, the profits rise along with the CEO's compensation packages. People commit crimes and the people who run corporations have mastered "plausible deniability" (or reasonable doubt) to the point that the DOJ doesn't prosecute corporate criminals because they can't overcome the burden of proof. Laws need to be enforced and that won't happen as law as Corporate speech pays for the politicians' campaigns and influence.
Skizzel
No Tea, Koolaid. or Koch for me,
11:44 PM on 08/13/2012
And this is just one of many oil companies that demand we shield them from prosecution, give them our tax dollars, allow them to regulate themselves, and deny pollution is harmful.