Posts Tagged ‘John Watson’

Seems like Chevron can’t take the heat

By Mike G.
Thursday, January 20th, 2011
Raging Grannies at Chevron CEO John Watson's house

The Raging Grannies deliver the "Corporate Hall of Shame" certificate to Chevron CEO John Watson's house while holding a banner reading "Las Abuelitas Enojadas" - Spanish for "Raging Grannies." Click on the photo to see more pics from the event.

Yesterday we asked you to call Chevron CEO John Watson and “congratulate” him, as it had just been announced that Chevron had been inducted into Corporate Accountability International’s “Corporate Hall of Shame.”

Hundreds of folks made the call, only to discover that the phone number for Watson’s office was quickly diverted to a pre-recorded message asking them to call a different number. I guess too many calls came in even despite the bait and switch, because when people called that new number, they were told Chevron was no longer accepting comments from the public by phone, and they’d have to send an email to the company.

Incredibly, the folks who sent an email to the address supplied received an auto-response from Chevron telling them that that mailbox would no longer be monitored by anyone at the company, and they’d have to use a webform.

I guess Watson couldn’t take the heat, and decided to hide behind a never-ending labyrinth of bureaucracy. But that’s okay, we’re pretty sure he got our message all the same. Yesterday we teamed up with the Raging Grannies — an amazing group of activists – and headed down to Lafayette, CA to deliver a “Corporate Hall of Shame” certificate to Watson at his home.

The Raging Grannies came up with a great little ditty to sing to Watson. Of course no one would come to the gate of Watson’s home, so they had to sing it to him through the call box. You can see a photo montage and hear the Grannies singing in this video put together by the “embedded reporter” who rolled along with the Grannies yesterday:

Thanks to everyone who made calls, and extra special thanks to the Raging Grannies for being so awesome! We managed to shut down two phone lines and an email address down at Chevron HQ. Maybe that’s a sign that the folks at Chevron are starting to realize how ashamed of themselves they should be for refusing to clean up the company’s oil pollution in Ecuador… but I doubt it.

I’m sure Chevron would still love to hear from you, however. You can use this phone number — 925-842-3232 — and this sample call script to tell John Watson and Chevron how shameful you think their behavior is.

Congratulations to John Watson on His Shameful First Year as Chevron CEO!

By Mike G.
Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

Chevron Hall of Shame certificateGuess who just got inducted into the Corporate Hall of Shame? Well, yeah, Monsanto and BP, obviously. No one likes those guys. But Chevron is pretty darn unpopular too, what with all those billions of gallons of oil pollution that the company won’t take responsibility for still lying in the Ecuadorean Amazon and poisoning thousands of people.

The announcement that Chevron will be immortalized in the Corporate Hall of Shame comes just as Chevron CEO John Watson celebrates his one-year anniversary as head of the company. We had high hopes when Watson first took over — it was a chance for the company to start anew, to start working to redress the human rights and environmental abuses for which it is responsible. Alas, Watson has instead continued business as usual, steering his company directly into a vortex of corporate shame.

Take a couple of minutes to call John Watson and “congratulate” him. Here’s how you do that:

1. Call 925-842-9232. Your call will be answered by a secretary. Ask to speak with John Watson. If you’re asked if you want to leave a message, say yes.

2. Here’s a sample call script you can use for your message:

I’m calling to tell Mr. Watson that it is shameful that he’s been around for a year, and yet has done nothing to accept responsibility for Chevron’s 18 billion gallons of oil waste pollution in the Ecuadorean Amazon.

Thousands of Indigenous and campesino Ecuadoreans are still suffering from the effects of Chevron’s pollution, but instead of cleaning up its mess, Chevron spends millions on high-priced lawyers and a fancy ad campaign designed to convince us all that the company is really concerned about human rights and the environment.

Until Chevron does the right thing and cleans up Ecuador, John Watson and Chevron should be ashamed of themselves.

3. Let us know how it went after you call by filling out this form.

Slick PR campaigns like the one Chevron launched last year to convince us all that the company is socially and environmentally responsible can only change perception, not reality. But in this case, Chevron’s PR didn’t change anything — just like Watson hasn’t changed anything at Chevron. Luckily, thousands of us saw through the carefully cultivated PR image, and Chevron is now in the Corporate Hall of Shame.

So give Watson a ring right now! I’m sure he’d love to hear from you. Make sure to click here and let us know that you made the call.

Activists Derail Business School Q&A With Chevron CEO John Watson

By Mike G.
Wednesday, October 13th, 2010

Rainforest Action Network photo: Change Chevron activists confront John Watson at his alma mater, University of Chicago
Change Chevron activist Josh Kahn Russell holds a banner reading “Energy shouldn’t cost lives” while Chevron CEO John Watson flees up a staircase (Watson is on the top left).

Chevron CEO John Watson was invited to speak about “The Energy Economy” at the University of Chicago, his alma mater, this morning. The event provided audience members a chance to ask Watson questions, and as it just so happens, we have a few we’ve been meaning to ask him. So we sent some activists to the event.

Here’s how it went down, as told by Josh Kahn Russell, who led our team on the ground in Chicago and chased John Watson right out of his own event:

Today Chevron CEO John Watson spoke about the new era of energy at the University of Chicago’s business school, Chicago Booth. Some friends and I were concerned about Chevron’s attempts to evade both the law and the company’s moral responsibility to clean up the 18 billion gallons of toxic oil waste it deliberately dumped in the Amazon, killing 1,400 people and poisoning thousands of others. So we paid him a visit.

Dressed business casual, we came in early and each took seats in different parts of the room. We listened to John Watson distance Chevron from the BP oil disaster. He reassured us all that Chevron is a thoughtful oil company. He went on to say that, above all other objectives, “No goal is more important than operating in a safe and responsible manner.”

On that note, Debra Michaud, an alumna of the University of Chicago, jumped up to express her dismay that a fellow graduate would be involved in poisoning the communities of 30,000 people. She asked Watson to speak to Chevron’s toxic legacy in Ecuador.

Watson was quick to evade the question, claiming that the damage was not Chevron’s responsibility. He seemed relieved at the end, as if he was thinking, “Phew, glad that’s over.” But it wasn’t.

A couple minutes later I took the mic and pointed out the irony in Watson’s allegations of “deception and conspiracy” on the part of the Indigenous plaintiffs in the court case, as his comments themselves were the real deception. After pointing out his false claims of remediation, he asked that we all just wait and “see how it all plays out.” After waiting through 17 years of Chevron’s delay-deceive-and-distort tactics, I kept pushing and went on to challenge his arguments.

The students in the room were engaged. Our respectful tone and figures presented from scientific case studies played well with the Business School crowd. One person near me glanced to the podium and murmured to her neighbor, “Why isn’t he answering the question?” Watson’s eyes darted around nervously as he realized that his presentation was being hijacked.

Watson’s entourage from the Business school looked panicked. The moderator escorted me off the microphone. A few minutes later, Abigail Singer went up to the mic to speak, and the alarmed moderator declared the Q&A over, after seeing Abigail’s paper, fearing she too would ask about Ecuador. She was escorted to her seat, and the event was declared over.

Rainforest Action Network photo: Change Chevron activists confront Chevron CEO John Watson at University of Chicago
Watson, who can be seen from behind just over the right side of the banner, is ushered away by security guards after the event is declared over by organizers.

It was clear that the one thing people would remember from the event was the controversy about Chevron’s role in poisoning Ecuadorean Amazon communities.

I went up to shake Watson’s hand, and was immediately blocked by security guards who ushered him away. We persistently followed him out, holding up a banner reading “Energy shouldn’t cost lives” all the way out of the building. Two people from the crowd cheered us on, saying “Way to stand up!” and “Keep going!” We did, until the moderator, furious, saw to it that we were escorted from the building.

John Watson needs to know that this issue won’t simply go away. It is going to stay in his face until he addresses it head on — even on his home turf and alma mater.

Check out the video:

Breaking news: “Toxic sludge boss” brought to justice

By Mike G.
Monday, October 11th, 2010

Rainforest Action Network - Flickr photo set: Chevron's Toxic Legacy in Ecuador's Amazon
A pipe to drain crude contamination from open toxic pools into waterways near Lago Agrio, Ecuador. The toxic pools in the Ecuadorean Amazon rainforest were abandoned by Texaco (now Chevron) after oil drilling operations ended in 1990 and were never remediated. Photo by Caroline Bennett / Rainforest Action Network

It seems, at times, as if corporate executives operate with near-impunity, rarely being held accountable for polluting the planet in their quest for profits. But today, at least one exec is behind bars for contributing to the deaths of several people who were inundated by millions of gallons of toxic sludge that his company had failed to dispose of properly.

No, I’m not talking about Chevron CEO John Watson, though I certainly could (and probably should) be. Watson is still at large, enjoying his impunity while 30,000 Ecuadoreans continue to suffer the effects of the 18 billion gallons of toxic oil waste his company refuses to clean up in the rainforests of Ecuador.

I’m actually talking about Zoltan Bakonyi, the managing director of MAL Rt., the Hungarian Aluminum Production and Trade Company, which was responsible for a flood of toxic sludge that killed eight people in Hungary last week.

The similarities between what happened in Hungary and the ongoing catastrophe in Ecuador are striking. Both are entirely man-made disasters that should never have happened, both are the result of corporate negligence, and both point out how environmentally unsustainable industries externalize the costs of their dirty businesses onto those communities unfortunate
enough to be adjacent to their polluting operations.

There are plenty of differences between the two cases, as well. For one thing, the toxic sludge from MAL Rt.’s aluminum plant only claimed eight lives and seems to be mostly contained at this point, whereas Chevron’s toxic oil waste has so far led to some 1,400 deaths, and could lead to 10,000 more by 2080 even if Chevron cleans up its mess immediately — which of course the company still refuses to do altogether.

The biggest difference is the fact that MAL Rt. managing director Zoltan Bakonyi has been detained by Hungarian authorities and is being held responsible, while John Watson is still free, still polluting, and still not taking responsibility for the damage his company’s pollution has caused.

The Change Chevron team leaves their cleaning supplies at John Watson's house

Yesterday, as part of 350.org’s 10/10/10 Global Work Party, we got to work cleaning up Chevron stations in an attempt to urge the company to do the same in Ecuador. At the end of the day, we dropped off our cleaning supplies at Watson’s home in Lafayette, CA (as you can see in the photo above) in the hopes that he might put them to use some time soon. If you want to help, you can go to Chevron’s Facebook page and tell Watson and Chevron to get to work cleaning up Ecuador right now.

Chevron needs to get to work

By Mike G.
Sunday, October 10th, 2010

Why did we get to work to clean up Chevron stations today as part of the 10/10/10 Global Work Party? The answer is pretty simple: Chevron refuses to clean up its own messes, so we wanted to set a good example for the company to follow.

According to a new scientific analysis released last month, the 18 billion gallons of toxic oil waste polluting Ecuador’s rainforest could lead to as many as 10,000 Ecuadoreans dying of cancer by 2080 — and that’s even if Chevron cleans up its mess in Ecuador immediately. That number could rise exponentially if Chevron doesn’t take action. But so far the company has refused to get to work.

That’s why we sent teams to temporarily shut down all 10 San Francisco Chevron gas stations for “cleaning” of oil spills. Check out the pics:

Our activists were at the Chevron stations to confront the company on its pollution in Ecuador, and on its pollution in communities around the world, from California to Ecuador to Nigeria. While Chevron refuses to take responsibility for this pollution, the company is actively working to stall climate and clean energy policies that would get us off of dirty fossil fuels once and for all. Chevron needs to clean up its own mess, and to stop standing in the way of those of us who are getting to work to make the clean energy future a reality.

After shutting down the stations in San Francisco, we headed to Lafayette, CA — home of Chevron CEO John Watson. If ever there were a guy who needs to get to work, John Watson is that guy. Unfortunately, he recently told an interviewer that he thinks it will take “generations” for us to make the switch from fossil fuels to renewable energy. This is clearly not acceptable: There are 30,000 Ecuadoreans living amongst Chevron’s toxic pollution, and the entire world is threatened by global warming. Lives are at stake.

So we stopped by Watson’s house at the end of the day and dropped off our cleaning supplies, as a not-terribly-subtle suggestion that the CEO get to work. Check out the video.

There were, of course, more 7,000 work parties in about 180 countries today. Around 1,200 of those work parties were in the U.S., which easily dwarfs the number of astroturf events organized by the American Petroleum Institute this summer, and is nearly double the 642 Tax Day Tea Parties organized this spring with the support of Fox News. Check out the highlights from around the world on 350.org.

Chevron CEO: Oil and gas will be around for “generations”

By Mike G.
Friday, October 8th, 2010

Chevron spends a lot of time and money on its PR efforts aimed at convincing us that the company is a responsible corporate citizen concerned about the same things that keep us regular joes up at night, things like the environment, worker safety, and the inordinate influence of corporate money on our political process.

But if you’re really paying close attention (which we are), some times the truth slips out despite Chevron’s carefully prepared public façade. And the truth is, no matter what they say or do, the company is committed to putting profits over the planet and keeping us hooked on their dirty energy for as long as possible.

Rain Forest Action Network: John Watson ad
We ran this half-page ad in the New York Times earlier this year depicting John Watson’s face accompanied by the message, “Chevron’s oil men have polluted the Ecuadorian rainforest for decades. This man can do something about it now.” As it turns out, this man is okay with waiting generations to do something about oil pollution. View more Rainforest Action Network pics on Flickr.

For instance, Chevron CEO John Watson recently reiterated that his company is “neutral” on Prop 23 — the proposition that will be voted on by Californians this November that would essentially kill the state’s landmark global warming law. In fact, he reiterated his company’s neutrality over and over and over, despite being urged by the interviewer: “”Come on, take a stand here.”

But, after being pressed further and eventually leaving his official script behind for a moment, Watson stated that he thinks the transition from fossil fuels to what he called “new fuels” will take “generations.” Not if we have anything to say about it, Mr. Watson.

The planet can’t wait generations for clean energy to replace dirty fossil fuels like oil. John Watson and Chevron will continue to make a killing as long as we delay that transition, however, so it’s not hard to imagine how he arrived at his view on the matter.

The profit motive also explains why Chevron took third place on the Center for American Progress’s “Top 10 political pressure spending by energy companies” list, behind only Exxon Mobil and ConocoPhillips. From January 2009 to June 2010, Chevron spent over $28 million on lobbying and PAC contributions to federal candidates in order to protect its oil business.

The fact that Chevron spent so much on lobbying speaks even louder than Watson’s words. It’s time for Chevron to stop protecting its oily profits at the expense of the planet, and get real about being a responsible corporate citizen.

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.

Chevron’s Legal Team Sets Sights on the First Amendment, and Filmmaker.

By Nick
Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Pictured Chevron Lawyers: 1) R. Hewitt Pate, 2) Scott A. Edelman, 3) Andrea E. Neuman, 4) Randy M. Mastro

Chevron has spent millions on lawyers in order to delay and deny justice to the 30,000 Ecuadorean people impacted by the oil giant’s massive oil contamination in the Amazon. Now Chevron is sending their legal hounds after a new target.

Chevron’s most recent legal attack? The First Amendment and acclaimed director of award-winning documentary film Crude, Joe Berlinger.

In a ditch effort to delay the Ecuador court case further Chevron, hoping to scour Berlinger’s footage for material useful to their legal maneuvers and public relations strategies, is dragging Joe Berlinger into court to demand he hand over all of the 600+ hours of footage shot for the making of Crude.

The director has vowed to resist this attack on his rights, and freedom of the press, in a New York court this Friday.

Add your voice, calling for Chevron Lawyers to Stop attacking the First Amendment.

In today’s Guardian Berlinger said:

“This is a violation of the first amendment and journalistic privilege,” “Just because they want to look at my footage doesn’t mean they have the right to look at my footage.”

Berlinger also commented that he has been receiving support from 100’s of documentary filmmakers and journalists who fear the “chilling” impact on documentaries if sources’ protection could not be guaranteed.

Crude unflinchingly depicts the human suffering and environmental devastation caused by Chevron’s actions in Ecuador.

Over 325 of you hosted Crude screenings last month. Again and again, you told us that the movie inspired your community to take action to hold the oil giant accountable.

Joe Berlinger made a movie that Chevron didn’t want the world to see. And now Chevron is determined to punish him for it. Don’t let Chevron shred the First Amendment in order to evade justice in Ecuador.

Tell Chevron’s lawyers to stop harassing people who speak truthfully about its oil disaster in Ecuador’s Amazon rainforest.

Emergildo’s Story

By Brianna
Friday, March 5th, 2010

This past week, Emergildo Criollo, an Indigenous Ecuador leader of the Cofan people traveled 3,000 miles from his home in the Amazon rainforest to California. He came to California to share his story and ask for support in getting one of the world’s largest oil companies (Chevron) to clean up one of the largest environmental disasters in history.

For a whirlwind few days this week, Emergildo shared his story with Chevron employees, California Senators and Assemblymembers, journalists, activists, and Chevron’s new CEO John Watson’s Lafayette neighbors. (more…)

California Lawmakers Want to Help Make Chevron Clean Up Ecuador

By Brianna
Thursday, March 4th, 2010

Last night, Emergildo Criollo, the Indigenous leader from Ecuador, met with California legislators and asked for their support in the 16+ year campaign to demand Chevron remediate massive oil contamination affecting over 30,000 people. Along with supporters from Amazon Watch and Rainforest Action Network, Emergildo spoke with lawmakers about the impact of California’s largest company in Ecuador, and what they can do to support his community’s call for environmental cleanup and action to prevent such tragedies in the future. (more…)