Archive for May, 2010

Chevron Shuts Out Global Community Leaders, and the Truth, From Annual Shareholders Meeting

By Nick
Friday, May 28th, 2010

Wednesday, Chevron opened it’s annual Shareholder meeting in Houston. Inside CEO John Watson, in his first shareholder meeting since assuming the position in January, described Chevron as a “good neighbor. However outside at the very moment John Watson uttered those words he was having global community leaders, all with legal proxies to attend the meeting, removed from the entrance of the building after being refused entry to the meeting. After traveling from as far as Australia, Burma, Nigeria, Ecuador and Alaska, community leaders were rebuffed and outwardly disrespected by Chevron CEO John Watson.

27 people from around the world traveled to Houston for Chevron’s 2010 Annual Shareholders meeting. Of the 27 only 7 were allowed to enter the meeting. One of the people that was refused entry to the shareholder meeting was Guillermo Grafa, an Indigenous leader from Ecuador. “We don’t need empathy from Chevron, we need them to accept full responsibility for the pain and suffering they have caused our people and clean up Ecuador now,” said Grafta.

In response to Chevron’s actions, four people took part in a sit-in at the entrance of the shareholder meeting while other blocked the outside exit. The 4 who refused to leave Chevron property after they were denied access to the meeting were arrested on trespassing charges and hauled to waiting police vans.

The four arrested at the entrance were Juan Parras a long time environmental justice activist in Houston and founder of TEJAS, an EJ group fighting refineries on the Texas Gulf Coast; Rev. Jerome Davis a livelong civil rights hero who marched in Selma and has long fought for environmental justice in Richmond, CA; and Mitch Anderson and Han Shan from Amazon Watch, an organization working in solidarity with Indigenous communities fighting Chevron in Ecuador.

In addition to the four arrested, Antonia Juhasz of the Chevron Program at Global Exchange was also arrested inside the meeting. She was forcefully removed from the meeting after calling in

Han Shan of Amazon Watch summed up Chevron’s intention for the day while being taken to an awaiting police van

“This is the way Chevron operates everywhere around the world–silencing people who raise concerns about its operations. Shame on Chevron!”

Unfortunately for Chevron it looks like the calls for accountability are getting louder and louder, and They won’t be silenced ant time soon.

You can see more Photos from the day HERE

Note: all arrested have been released and await their hearing on June 6.

Chevron 2010 Alternative Report: A Look At The True Cost of Chevron

By Nick
Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

As public outrage at the oil industry intensifies and questions on how to reign in the industry abound, an unprecedented global coalition of communities harmed by – and fighting back against – the industry present both a groundbreaking report, “The True Cost of Chevron: an Alternative 2009 Annual Report,” (entire report in PDF is HERE) and a landmark organizing model for taking on Big Oil.

Written by dozens of community leaders from sixteen countries and ten states across the United States where Chevron operates, the 60-page report encompasses the full range of Chevron’s activities, from coal to chemicals, offshore to onshore production, pipelines to refineries, natural gas to toxic waste, and lobbying and campaign contributions to greenwashing.

On May 25, forty report authors will appear in Houston at a press conference to address the true cost of Chevron’s operations in their communities. On May 26, they will deliver the report directly to Chevron inside the company’s Annual Shareholders Meeting.

The 2009 report has gained even greater import in the wake of the BP/Transocean explosion as it exposes Chevron’s role as the largest leaseholder in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico and its role at the forefront of lobbying to expand offshore drilling across the U.S. and around the world. Chevron also contracts with Transocean for its massive offshore operations.

The true Cost of Chevron’s global operations and the resulting environmental and human rights abuses have never before been so collectively and thoroughly documented. As this unprecedented coalition continues to build pressure on Chevron it looks more likely than ever that we will Change Chevron, because energy shouldn’t cost lives.

Judge Guts Chevron’s Malicious Prosecution Suit Against Lawyer

By Nick
Friday, May 14th, 2010

Kate Moser
The Recorder
May 14, 2010

A California federal judge threw out eight of nine claims (pdf) in Chevron’s malicious prosecution case against a Massachusetts lawyer on Wednesday.

But while she granted most of the lawyer’s anti-SLAPP motion, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken left the door open a crack for Chevron to try to prove one claim that Cristobal Bonifaz maliciously sued the energy giant.

(more…)

Big Oil Profits While the Rest of Us Pay

By Maria
Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Activists with RAN attend the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.

Today, BP, and their contractors, Transocean and Halliburton, are testifying before Congress to determine who is at fault for the nearly 4 million gallons of oil wreaking havoc on the Gulf Coast. At this morning’s Senate hearing the CEOs of each company – and the political benefactors of Big Oil’s big money like Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski – are asking us to believe that what is happening off the Gulf Coast is just one terrible accident or a few reckless companies who made some mistakes.

When it comes to the politics of Big Oil and its impact on our environment, our economy and our climate, we’re not talking about one bad apple we’re talking about a whole barrel of bad apples.

Washington’s response to the disaster in the Gulf cannot be limited to holding hearings and cleaning up the spill (although both are critical at this point). We must set our country on a course to fundamentally change how we produce and consume energy so we can end our dependence on oil and other dirty and dangerous fossil fuels once and for all. And we must stop Big Oil’s big money influence on our politicians and our elections.

In California, as these oil hearings are unfolding on the Hill, Big Oil bullies Chevron, ConocoPhillips, ConocoPhillips, Shell and Exxon Mobil have joined with the California Chamber of Commerce to push a proposed ballot measure that would protect them from fees used to lessen their harmful effects on the environment. Chevron alone has spent over $250,000 on a measure that would protect oil companies from cleaning up oil spills and instead pass the costs on to taxpayers.

Which is why activists with the RAN joined BP, Transocean and Halliburton in today’s Senate committee hearings. Holding signs that read, “Big Oil profits, we pay” and with black, oily tears painted on their faces, activists were there to remind our decision makers that the underlying cause of this disaster is our dangerous and dirty addiction to oil as well as Big Oil’s slippery influence on politics, which is undermining our nation’s transition to a clean energy future.

Senator Cardin, who is co-chairing one of today’s hearings, put it perfectly in the Baltimore Sun:

“The catastrophic oil spill ravaging the Gulf of Mexico and bearing down on coastal states is another reminder: America’s current energy policy is a disaster. We need to break our dangerous addiction to oil and promote safe and clean sources of power and fuel — and we need to begin today.”

Lamar McKay, president and chairman of BP America, waits to testify before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. Photo by Tracy A Woodward of The Washington Post


He took the words right out of my mouth – America’s current energy policy is a disaster. Big Oil and King Coal assert tremendous power in Washington, operating unchecked and unregulated, and wreaking havoc on our environment, public health and our climate. The oil spill in the Gulf is a tragedy, but it is not the only horrifying dirty oil disaster local communities are facing. From the devastating tar sands projects in Alberta to the oily mess Chevron left in Ecuador, across the globe the price of oil is too high.

With climate and clean energy legislation at the forefront of political debate, it is critical that we heed the larger lessons of this disaster. For starters, here is what I would suggest:

1. We must separate oil and state. Oil companies need to get out of the way of good government, and stop lobbying against necessary clean energy policies. And, perhaps more importantly, our politicians need to stop taking money from Big Oil, which is clouding their ability to regulate this dangerous industry and is one influential reason they have been unable to pass strong energy policy.

2. Oil companies must pay up for all the damage they have done to date. While we transition to a clean energy economy, oil giants like BP, Exxon and Chevron and their mercenaries-for-hire like Halliburton and Transocean must be held accountable for their role in environmental disasters and regulated more closely. History has taught us that Oil giants won’t take responsibility willingly. For decades, Exxon-Mobil dodged cleanup costs for the Exxon Valdez spill. Chevron is still fighting to avoid responsibility for the billions of gallons of oil-contaminated waste that were dumped into the Amazon watershed by Texaco, now owned by Chevron. Let’s make sure that BP isn’t allowed to follow in that dirty legacy.

Voters get it. In light of the oil spill, voters, one recent poll suggests, have come to understand the dangers of our dependence on oil and the need for comprehensive clean energy reform. Overall, 61 percent of 2010 voters support and just 31 percent oppose a bill “that will limit pollution, invest in domestic energy sources and encourage companies to use and develop clean energy.”

Let’s just hope Washington gets it too. Because clean, safe and renewable are three words the oil industry cannot say.

Crossposted at sfgate.com