By Paul Paz Y Miño
Chevron has dehumanized the people of Ecuador in order to disregard their suffering
Last week, Chevron held its annual shareholder meeting in San Ramon, California. Despite announcing a new CEO and massive profits, the meeting
It's worth noting that Chevron shareholder meetings are unlike many other corporate AGMs. At Chevron, shareholders attending endure not only the usual metal detectors, but they must also empty their pockets and allow any documents they bring with them to be examined. In 2010,
From 1964 to 1992, Chevron, then operating as Texaco, deliberately dumped 16 billion gallons of toxic oil drilling waste into the once pristine Amazon rainforest to save a whopping $3 per barrel. After indigenous and farmer communities sued, Chevron was found liable for $9.5 billion after years of litigation in Ecuador – the venue of its own choosing. Despite having admitted to the dumping, Chevron has vowed never to pay for a clean up and promised the communities a "lifetime of litigation" and to fight the judgment "until Hell freezes over, and then fight it out on the ice."
The Ecuador case dates back decades, and the initial pollution occured so long ago that it has apparently become "unreal" to Chevron's management. When Texaco, which merged with Chevron in 2001, deliberately dumped the toxic waste into the Ecuadorian Amazon, it knowingly poisoned the land and drinking water of tens of thousands of people. If you were responsible for such a massive crime, you'd probably want to pretend it never happened, too. Chevron is still trying. But it has failed. In fact, it seemed caught off guard at the level of resistance at the meeting itself and the realization that its bogus RICO verdict has not "made it all go away" is starting to sink in at the highest levels of management.
As we reported the day of the meeting, 36 institutional shareholders, collectively representing over $109 billion in assets under management, recently sent CEO Wirth a letter calling on him to finally redress Chevron's toxic legacy in the Amazon. Reinforcing that call,
The main reason that Chevron execs believe they can claim the Ecuador issue poses no financial liability is the favorable verdict they got in their preemptive RICO SLAPP suit from shockingly-biased federal judge Lewis Kaplan (check out this other brief
Misleading its shareholders, Chevron's CEO points to the recent decision in Chevron's favor by the appeals court in Ontario as indication it is "winning" there. The truth is, no judge who has looked at the actual evidence in Ecuador has ever ruled in Chevron's favor. It's impossible to do so as the
The Ontario appeals court got a major point completely backwards in its ruling. When explaining why it would not support the Ecuadorians' appeal to seize Chevron's assets it wrote: "What is really driving the appellants' appearance in our courts is their inability to enforce their judgment in the United States." In fact, the Ecuadorians never tried to enforce their verdict in the US because Chevron launched its legal attack there preemptively before the case in Ecuador was affirmed by its Supreme Court. Furthermore, Chevron's case against the Ecuadorians and their lawyer excluded all evidence of the actual crime in Ecuador and the case that it did present has since been disproven by forensic evidence and a shocking
This will make the Canadian court decision that much more critical to the issues of international comity and access to justice for indigenous peoples and others harmed by corporations (two things already cited by the Ontario appeals when they declared this a public interest case in a ruling a few months ago). The pressure on the Supreme Court of Canada to take a stand in one of the most egregious cases of corporate crime and abuse of power will be overwhelming.
In the end,
It's time for Wirth to wake up and realize the albatross of this case will not go away and the bad deeds of his predecessors will tarnish his tenure until he takes the rational approach and meets with the Ecuadorians to talk about how Chevron can make things right and finally clean up the Amazon.