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Showing posts with label dirty oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dirty oil. Show all posts

Friday, August 14, 2009

Protest Chevron AUG. 15th Richmond California



Time for some ACTION!!! This weekend groups from all over the Bay area will be convening at the Richmond BART Station to protest against Chevron and make sure they don't forget how they are polluting not only Richmond, California but places where Black, Brown and Yellow people live all over the world.

Organizer and U.S. Campaign Coordinator for the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives Ananda Lee Tan states, “People, not corporations, should drive the critical climate talks in Copenhagen,”

The protest at the Chevron Refinery on Saturday will begin at 11:30 AM with a festival and rally at the Richmond BART Station at 16th Street and MacDonald Avenue. It will include a march to the Chevron oil refinery and a non-violent civil disobedience action that could result in arrests.

But hey Checktheweather.net is not co-signing on anyone going out and getting arrested if you ain't got the bail money.

Not in the Bay? You can still make a difference RIGHT NOW Click on this link to send a letter to Chevron and see a picture of an old, ugly yet very rich white guy whose playing a role in giving your cousin asthma and contaminating the planet.

What is the True Cost of Chevron?

Now what does Chevron have to say?


On buses, on television and billboards across the nation people have been bombarded with advertisement saying things like "I will reuse more" or "I will drive my car less". The advertisements are from Chevron, one of the largest producers of oil around the world. A group of local and global environmental groups including Amazon Watch, Global Exchange, Justice in Nigeria Now, Rainforest Action Network, Richmond Progressive Alliance and West County Toxics Coalition having gathered together to launch a response campaign called The True Cost of Chevron to combat the polluting company and address what they see is hypocrisy in Chevron advertisements.

 The group recently released a report The True Cost of Chevron:  An alternative annual report. The report was published soon  after Chevron reported its 2008 earnings of $24 billion, making  it the second most profitable corporation in America. The true  cost of Chevron argues that Chevron didn't get there by just  selling a lot of Gas. They got their profits on the backs of poor  people in the US and around the world, contaminating vital water  and placing life endangering toxins into the air. The $24 billion profits Chevron made last year is more than the Gross Domestic Products of over 150 countries.




Chevron has dedicated a whole section of their website to what they call "Human Energy Stories." Here they discuss how it's going to take all of us to fight climate change and what the corporation is doing to not only use less dirty energy but also how they are working to put a portion of their work into community service. In the Community and Society section they write: "The places where we operate and the people that we work with are the communities we call home so we make an effort to make them better places."

So how does Chevron see making communities better places to live? Is it by cleaning up from nasty oil spills? Doing bio-remediation projects to decontaminate the land around the oil refineries or helping to pay for the medical expenses of the people who are getting cancer, miscarriages and respiratory illnesses? NO! Of the 24 BILLION dollars Chevron made last year they donated 160 million to community programs around the world. None of the programs address the climate and environmental justice concerns brought up by the True Cost of Chevron campaign. However, They are giving back by donating to schools and HIV/AIDS research, one of the only mainstream diseases that has not been explicitly linked to environmental toxins. Not that that is a bad thing, but we wonder, what would happen if Chevron spent some of the estimated 50-100 million dollar advertising campaign to just really Clean Up The Mess They Have Already Made Across the World.
I mean really Chevron "will you join us?"


Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Who Was Ken Saro Wiwa?

Environmental Activist, Ken Saro Wiwa


Ken Saro-Wiwa was more than just your average activist, He led one of the most monumental non-violent direct actions against dirty oil in history. businessman, novelist and television producer Ken Saro-Wiwa gathered with the Ogoni People of the Niger Delta of Nigeria to stage Non-violent protests against Shell oil and the Nigerian Government for the human rights violations associated with the Oil Fields on Ogoni Land.




Through his leadership The Ogoni People were able to successfully remove Shell from their land. In 1995, After many years of protests, actions and the controversial deaths of 4 Ogoni leaders, Ken-Saro Wiwa was imprisoned by the Nigerian Government and executed.

The Ogoni People sued Shell and the Nigerian Government over Saro-Wiwa's death and recently Shell settled the case for 15.5 million dollars.

For more information on Ken Saro-Wiwa and the Ogoni People visit:

http://remembersarowiwa.com


Also check out this video!

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Dirty Oil is Crude Worldwide and We Have Evidence!



From Nigeria to Peru to Baton Rouge Louisiana, Big Oil is polluting the planet and the people. Recently, Shell gasoline settled with the Ogoni People of Nigeria for $15.5 million. The Ogoni people accused Shell of playing a role in the execution of Tribal leaders who were running a non-violent campaign to get Shell oil mines out of their village. In South America there is an on-going campaign to protect the Amazon rainforest from oil and natural resource extraction by big companies like Chevron. Checktheweather.net sat down with filmmaker and activist Han Shan to discuss his thoughts on the Ogoni Settlement and to catch a trailer from his new award winning documentary "Crude" by Joe Berlinger

CRUDE - official trailer from Crude The Movie on Vimeo.



CTW: What was your initial reaction about the settlement:

Han Shan: There was an initial shock, A little bit of dissapointment that Shell is not going to be on trial but as it sank in more I realize that this is a victory. We have been working on this for a very long time. For a true victory Shell needs to change it's way of doing business all together.

CTW: what does this settlement mean for others fighting dirty oil around the world.

Han Shan: There are skeptics but by and large shell paid 15.5 million for crimes they say they didn't commit. There is no gag order on the plaintiffs and the lawyers. They were able to get the word out through media to show the collusion with Shell and the Nigerian military. I hope it will be inspiring to continue their fight and use legal mechanism. This case also broadened the use of the alien tort statute since Brian Anderson- Head of Shell Nigeria during Ogoni Massacre was brought to trial. It is also a powerful opportunity to look into who Ken-Saro Wiwa was. There are so many facets to this case

Ken Saro Wiwa's non-violent movement was successful in getting Shell out of Ogoni in 1993 there are still pipelines and illegal oil spills and even if they don't have oil fields in Ogoni they have a triple standard (Shell) the way they act in the Niger Delta, the way the act in poor areas of the US and then how they act in the Suburbs of Dallas, Texas. The way Shell acts in the Niger Delta is shameful.

CTW: What can people do to support:

Move towards a sustainable energy future. Until we end our addiction to oil we will always have violence. Conflict over resources is universal. We need a much more radical solution than what oil companies are willing to deal with. Oil companies are now taking away from investing in renewable energy and more into tar sands in Canada
The best thing is to keep spreading the word of what the true price of Oil is. We need a real solution that is going to support indigenous groups. we need to revisit free trade because we as americans play a huge role in what's going on in Peru and around the world. In Peru- Conoco-Phillips is the leading holder of exploratory license in Peru.

CTW: Now that this case is settled what's next?

Han Shan: This is a crime that you are never going to end with police. How do you lock up corporations?

CTW: What would bold climate legislation mean to you>>

Han Shan: We need to change up the economic incentives. there is no incentive to investing into renewable energies. Groups are working on a report to showcase that Shell is one of the prime players in weakening the Waxman-Markey bill. it's more cost -effective for these groups to invest in tar sands than renewable energy technology.

We need a Manhattan Project for renewable energy. I'm dissapointed that Obama has not used those funds to really re-imagine our country like the Manhattan Project or Marshall Plan. With the kind of technology that we have I am shocked we are not doing more.

One of the most important facets is local democratic control.There is a corruption that comes when you have big international companies coming in vying for control.

Monday, July 20, 2009

Join the Mobilization for Climate Justice


The Mobilization for Climate Justice is a network of organizations and people, from both coasts, working to get a solid climate justice voice in the Copenhagen talks this December. There will be a mass action on climate change led by MCJ on November 30th. Here on the West Coast, we're starting on August 15th, with a rally&festival against the Chevron expansion in Richmond, CA.

Check out their website for more information: www.actforclimatejustice.org

MCJlogo09


Here's their open letter, explaining their mission:

MOBILIZATION FOR CLIMATE JUSTICE

OPEN LETTER TO GRASSROOTS

Help Organize for Urgent Action on Climate Change


The Mobilization for Climate Justice is a North America-based network of organizations and activists who have joined together to build a North American climate justice movement that emphasizes non-violent direct action and public education to mobilize for effective and just solutions to the climate crisis. The Mobilization for Climate Justice invites communities, organizations and activists across North America to join us in organizing mass action on climate change on November 30, 2009 (N30). N30 is significant because it both immediately precedes the upcoming UN Climate Conference in Copenhagen (COP-15) and is the ten-year anniversary of the successful shut down of the WTO in Seattle, when activists worldwide came together to demonstrate the power of collective action. The Copenhagen climate meetings will be a major focus for international mass actions this November and December, and the MCJ is linked to these efforts as well.


Urgent action is needed around the Copenhagen climate talks because this is where governments around the world plan to finalize the international climate regime that will take effect when the Kyoto Protocol climate agreement expires in 2012. So far it appears that the new climate agreement will be nothing more than business as usual-sacrificing real action on climate change in favor of market-based approaches that enhance corporate profits, while delaying urgent measures to forestall catastrophic global heating.

A Radical Change in Direction is Urgently Needed

The MCJ invites you to inspire and organize a radical change in direction to put climate justice, ecological integrity and people’s rights at the center of international climate negotiations.

Market-based approaches to climate change dominate the UN climate talks. Carbon-trading and carbon offset projects have allowed polluters to avoid cutting emissions and accelerated the corporate take-over of the natural world at the expense of local and Indigenous communities. Those most immediately threatened by climate change and its false solutions – Indigenous Peoples, people of color, women, peasant and family farmers, fisherfolk, forest dependent communities, youth, and marginalized communities have been systematically excluded from the negotiations.

The climate crisis is directly linked to the financial crisis, the food crisis and the extinction crisis, as well as to militarism and war. They are rooted in an economic system dedicated to economic growth at any cost. We are uniting to challenge this system that puts profits over people or the earth. Urgent action to solve the climate crisis must include a complete transformation away from the dominant economic model of incessant and unsustainable growth, oppression and injustice.
We must highlight real, effective and just solutions to climate change
Join us in promoting solutions to climate change that are locally controlled, decentralized, bioregionally appropriate and socially just. Thousands of these solutions already exist and need to be promoted and supported with public funds.

Help ensure that large-scale, destructive corporate-controlled false solutions to climate change are eliminated. This includes so-called “clean coal,” agrofuels (industrial scale biofuels), nuclear power, and large-scale hydropower. It also includes REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation)-the UN and World Bank initiative that offers incentives for countries to sell off their forests, expel Indigenous and peasant communities, and transform biodiverse and carbon-rich forests into industrial timber plantations.

Some key solutions to climate change include:

o Drastically reducing emissions without resorting to carbon trading and offsetting or other false solutions such as nuclear energy, agrofuels, or “clean coal”, while protecting the rights of those affected by the transition;
o Keeping fossil fuels in the ground;
o Re-localization of production and consumption, prioritizing local markets and cooperative economies;
o Decentralized utility systems and community controlled clean renewable energy;
o Rights based resource conservation that enforces indigenous land rights and ends corporate control over energy, forests, seeds, land and water;
o Ending deforestation and its underlying causes, imposing international sanctions and wood tariffs, coupled with a massive forest restoration effort, managed primarily by indigenous forest-dwelling peoples;
o Ending excessive consumption in the North and by elites in the South;
o Repayment of ecological debts owed by northern governments and resource extracting corporations to peoples in the Global South

The goals of the Mobilization for Climate Justice are:

1) To build a global movement for climate justice that encourages urgent action to avoid catastrophic climate change, and which addresses the root social, ecological, political and economic causes of the climate crisis toward a total systemic transformation of our society.
2) To promote and strengthen the rights and voices of Indigenous and other affected peoples, (including workers in energy-intensive industries) in climate mitigation and adaptation strategies.
3) To expose the consequences of false and market-based climate “solutions” as well as corporate domination of climate negotiations, while advancing alternatives that can provide real and just solutions and which protect biodiversity.

Join Us in Taking Action!

Please join us in our national effort to organize educational events and non-violent direct actions at key locations in the U.S. on November 30, 2009. We welcome the active involvement of organizations that are united with us in our goals above, in our opposition to market-based false solutions to climate change, and in support of real, effective and just solutions to climate change.
We encourage local groups to create proposals for action on N30. We hope to have direct actions on climate change in locations across the U.S.

We also endorse and support a global call for action on October 12, 2009 the International Day of Action in Defense of Mother Earth and in Support of Indigenous Rights.

Please get involved and take action for climate justice.

Friday, July 3, 2009

How to Create Energy Independence for the US and Africa Too!



Today most people are out of summer school and off of work ready to celebrate the Fourth of July. Al Gore and the Alliance for Climate Protection are calling for Americans to "Declare Your Energy Independence". That means breaking the addiction to dirty forms of energy like coal and oil. All this comes at the same time that President Barack Obama prepares for his first trip to Africa as President of the United States. A group of some of the leading African Advocacy organizations, including the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), Africa Action, Transafrica Forum, Global Aids Alliance, Africa Faith and Justice Network, Priority Africa Network, American Friends Service Committee and Association of Concerned Africa Scholars are calling for Obama to use this trip to Ghana to begin the formal creation of a new U.S. relationship with the continent of Africa; one that is based upon "mutual collaboration and respect between Africa and the United States.

So what would that mean in the dawning of the new Green Economy? Emira Woods, Co-director of IPS' Foreign Policy in Focus states,

"President Obama has advanced a bold vision for a global green economy, yet Africa is often not referenced in these discussions..."


The coalition of organizations is asking for your support in making sure Africa can also have energy independence. Woods goes on to say, "President Obama could bring political leverage for technology transfers and investment incentives in solar, wind, and tidal industries. Creating innovative new jobs can sustain the environment while allowing Africa to leapfrog its development in creative ways and also expanding opportunities for U.S. alternative technologies firms." The coalition hopes this trip to Africa will guide Obama and the US government in pushing for a Global Climate Fund. This fund will help support developing nations in transitioning to a green economy, remove African debt and take the foot of Dirty energy off of Africa's neck.

To read more and sign on to a letter calling for Obama to make his upcoming trip to Ghana the first step in a new and better relationship betweeen Africa and the US Click on the "Petition Du Jour" on the side bar or visit http://www.change.org/ips-dc/actions

Monday, June 8, 2009

Over 30 Environmental Justice Activists Murdered while Protesting in the Amazon Rainforest!



Protests turned for the worst this past Friday in the Amazons of Peru. Al Jazeera reports that over thirty indigenous Amazonians were killed during clashes with Peruvian government over planned oil and gas exploration on ancestral land.
Last Friday, thousands of indigenous people gathered in Bagua, Peru and created a human road blockade keeping government and corporate officials out of the rainforests they call home. Police attempted to break up the blockade of people which led to a violent clash between the protesters and police. When on the ground troops could not contain the protesters, witnesses reported that police officers shot fire and dropped teargas from helicopters.
The video below is footage from the protests. Although it is in Spanish, you can here the victims screaming out for help and water for the wounded.

Indigenous rights activist, Ben Powless of Ontario, Canada was in Peru during this tragic event while attending the Indigenous People's Summit held in Puno, Peru. Powless reported back that this tragedy is government retaliation for 50 days of ongoing protests. Along with the road blockade protesters have shut down parts of the Amazon and the Andes. On May 8th the Peruvian government announced a 60-day state of emergency in areas of the Amazon, suspending constitutional guarantees in an attempt to suppress the protests, which have targeted airports, bridges and river traffic. Alberto Pizango, elected representative of the Amazonian Peoples and supporter of the recent protests now has a warrant out for his arrest because of his high profile and alleged organizing support with the ongoing protests.

International human rights and Environmental Justice advocates are standing in support of Pizango and the thousands of other indigenous Peruvians who have lost their constitutional rights due to the protests to save their land and traditions.

Powless and the Indigenous people of Peru have offered some suggestions on how people like you (yes you reading this) can support this fight:


Please go here to send a letter to the President of Peru, and show him that the international community is watching and is outraged: http://www.amazonwatch.org/peru-action-alert.php

You may also donate to the cause with the following bank information: account number is 395-11-35-338057 (in nuevos soles, Peruvian currency) of the "Banco de Crédito del Peru" The contact information is Nicanor Alvarado Carrasco, coordinator of the "Vicaría del Medio Ambiente de Jaén". Phone: +511 076 433948.

with the suspension of constitutional rights it is even more important to scream and shout because there is a good chance that Pizango and other protestors will be tortured or executed once apprehended.

Continue to checktheweather.net for more info! Correspondents will also live tweet and blog from the protests planned for today Monday June 8th at 12:30 at the Peruvian Embassy in Washington, DC. Follow us on twitter or come join us if you are in the DC area!

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Filipino Americans Challenge Chevron on their Toxic Practices



San Ramon, California – On May 27, the Filipino/American Coalition for Environmental Solidarity joined a delegation of concerned activists and community leaders at Chevron’s annual shareholder meeting. Delegates exposed Chevron’s human rights abuses and environmental damages to investors, and demanded the oil giant address its human rights and environmental responsibilities.

FACES advisor Christine Cordero represented the Philippines as a proxy shareholder, with community leaders and allies of Chevron-affected communities in Nigeria, Ecuador, Richmond, Burma, Kazakhstan, and Canada. Inside the meeting, delegates delivered testimony and the groundbreaking alternative annual report, The True Cost of Chevron, to shareholders, CEO David O’Reilly and the Board of Directors.

Cordero delivered an account of Chevron’s operations in Pandacan, Metro Manila, a densely populated district where Chevron and its partners Shell and Petron operate a controversial oil depot. “Over 82,000 residents in Pandacan are impacted,” said Cordero. “I told O’Reilly and investors that the health of Chevron is not the size of its profit. It is the bodies, lungs, and hearts of the communities that they impact. This is about the health of communities and the long term of health of Chevron, and whether the corporation will choose to ignore the true costs of its operations.”

Pandacan has been called the potential site of the world’s worst petrochemical disaster. Residents suffer from chronic exposure to toxic emissions and the threat of catastrophic spills, fires, and explosions. Since 2006, FACES partnered with Pandacan groups advocating for closure and cleanup of the depot site. In March 2007, the Supreme Court mandated the depot’s removal, citing concerns for human safety. Despite this, the depot continued operations. On May 28, a week after the SC denied further appeals from Chevron and its partners, Manila Mayor Lim signed the contended Ordinance 7177. The ordinance, authored without consultation of residents, circumvents the Supreme Court decision and allows the depot to stay. Proponents say they will continue to challenge the issue.

Chevron is a defendant in a 15-year historic legal battle over the dumping of billions of gallons of toxic waste in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Chevron is faced with complicity in human rights abuses in Burma and connections with the military junta, military violence and shooting of peaceful protestors in Nigeria. In Richmond, where Chevron operates a huge, decades-old refinery linked with widespread cancers and asthma, groups are legally challenging Chevron’s proposed expansion.

“I asked O’Reilly whether Chevron would abide by the law of its host country,” said Cordero. “He gave no response.”

O’Reilly, who said he had heard of the alternative report, sent a clear message to Chevron affected communities around the world, told representatives that their grievances with the oil giant “are an insult to Chevron employees, and should be thrown in the trash.”

Outside the meeting, FACES joined dozens of concerned residents and advocates to stage a vibrant protest against the company's disregard for human rights, health and the environment. Speakers addressed Chevron’s impacts in Burma, Ecuador, the Philippines, Canada, Iraq, Nigeria, Kazakhstan, and the United States. Protestors lofted signs parodying Chevron’s Human Energy ad campaign. Signs for the Philippines read “How many Supreme Court decisions does it take?” and “Chevron, Clean Up in Metro Manila.”