Editorial
Commentary
Lisa
Richardson:
Chevron
takes on the plaintiffs
The
glorious Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco, historic host to presidents and
royals, was the improbable scene of a brawl this week. Squaring off beneath
the cream-and-gilt ceilings and behind mahogany doors were oil behemoth
Chevron Corp. and a pair of Ecuadorean environmental activists. It was
not, however, a fair fight. Oil giant vs. environmentalists? In San Francisco?
Chevron never had a chance.
The
occasion for the face-off was the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize.
In green circles, the prize is huge -- sort of an environmental Nobel.
(Indeed, a past Goldman winner, Kenyan tree planter Wangari Maathai,
did go on to win the Nobel Peace Prize.) Among this year's recipients
are lawyer Pablo Fajardo Mendoza and community organizer Luis Yanza,
who represent a class of 30,000 indigenous people in a lawsuit filed
in Ecuador alleging that, from 1964 to 1992, Texaco Inc., which was bought
by Chevron in 2001, polluted their land and water, sickening their families,
crops and animals.
Faced
with the powerful condemnation implied by the award to its adversaries,
Chevron did not flinch. It went after the activists, and the Goldman
Prize too -- saying the selection committee had been misled and that
it was about to tarnish the prize's illustrious reputation by bestowing
a bronze sculpture of Ouroboros and $150,000 on two charlatans. Learning
that Fajardo and Yanza would hold a news conference at the Fairmont on
Monday at 10 a.m., Chevron held one of its own one floor up, at 9.
The
company's PR offensive is understandable: A report by a court-appointed
expert found that Chevron could have to pay up to $16 billion if it loses
the case. So Chevron officials strove to get their points across in their
counter-conference, maintaining that the company remediated any contamination
that could have been laid at its door long ago -- and that the state-owned
oil company, Petroecuador, is the real culprit for whatever pollution
exists today.
But
it's hard for a liberal city to love an oil company, and the activists'
message was heart-rending. At the awards ceremony at the San Francisco
Opera House later that night, the audience watched a film -- narrated
by Robert Redford -- showing oil-soaked earth, physically disfigured
people and the grave sites of Ecuadoreans stricken with cancer. Viewers
were left pondering not legal distinctions but the fact that people in
Ecuador are fighting for their lives. And never, ever, Fajardo told the
audience, would he give up seeking justice for a humble people whose
way of life had been destroyed by Chevron. The case in Ecuador may take
years to resolve, but in the Opera House on Monday night, with the crowd
on its feet for Fajardo, Yanza and the other prize winners, Ecuador could
claim a victory.
Lisa
Richardson is a journalist with the Los Angeles Times.
Petroleumworld does not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
Note: This commentary was originally published by Los Angeles Times,
on 04/16/2007. Petroleumworld reprint this article in the interest of
our
readers.
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