Peru
tribe battles oil giant over pollution
LORETO,
PERU
Petroleumworld.com, Mar 24, 2008
Tomas Maynas says fish died and crops wilted
It is a familiar story
Big business moves into a pristine
wilderness and starts destroying the environment and
by turn the livelihoods of the indigenous people who
live there.
But in a reversal of plot, there are now cases of people
living traditional lifestyles who are now invading the
territory of the big companies and taking them on at
their own game.
The story of the Achuar tribe living in the Amazon rainforest
of north-eastern Peru is one of them.
Last year, they filed a class action lawsuit against oil
giant Occidental Petroleum, in Los Angeles.
Now they are awaiting a judge's decision on whether the
case can proceed in the US or will be sent back to Peru,
where it stands little chance of coming to court.
'No credible data
The Achuar people, who have lived for thousands of years
in the rainforest, allege that the company contaminated
their territory during more than 30 years of oil drilling,
making their people sick, even causing some to die, and
damaging their land and livelihoods beyond repair.
Occidental Petroleum, which pulled out of Peru eight years
ago, denies liability in the case.
Oil
spills are still found, the Achuar say
It has responded, saying: "We are aware of no credible
data of negative community health impacts resulting from
Occidental's operations in Peru."
The oil bonanza began in Peru almost 40 years ago when
many foreign companies were given an open invitation by
successive governments to test and drill in the Amazon.
What they did not consider was the devastating impact
it would have on the native people, principally the Achuar
- their land, their livelihood and their health.
The Achuar's spiritual leader, Tomas Maynas, wears a bright
red headdress made of toucan feathers, and has red war
paint streaked on his face. He is the plaintiff in the
suit against the company.
He remembers how everything changed when the oil companies
arrived. He says the animals ran away, the fish died and
their crops started to wilt.
A
whole generation had their health damaged. How can we
keep quiet as our parents did.
The lawsuit alleges Occidental Petroleum ignored industry
standards and employed out-of-date practices, dumping around
9bn barrels of toxic waste water into streams and rivers
over 30 years.
After Occidental left, its operations were taken over
by Pluspetrol.
Pluspetrol agreed to change practices in late 2006 when
the Achuar, after repeated attempts to negotiate, took
direct action.
Shotguns
and spears
Many
of the older Achuar men once fought in tribal wars with
their neighbours, now they finally had the chance
to hit their elusive new enemies where it hurt - in their
pockets.
Peacefully, yet armed with shotguns and spears, they occupied
and held the Amazon oil wells in October 2006.
The
ecosystem is the genetic bank of the Amazon...that is
our capital, the genetic bank that we have to preserve
for humanity, and for the world
The
Achuar came away with a commitment from Pluspetrol to
reduce contamination and to pay millions of dollars
to clean up and establish a 10-year health plan.
It was thanks to help from outside but also a new generation
of indigenous leaders who are learning how to protect their
rights in the modern world.
"A whole generation had their health damaged. How
can we keep quiet as our parents did?" asks 29-year-old
Petronila Chumpi.
"We
can't allow this, we're a new generation, we know how
to read and write and we have to help our people
because they didn't have the knowledge to defend themselves
against the oil companies. But now we do."
Improvement
Even on a fast motorboat, Trompeteros is a long day's
journey up three rain-swollen rivers from Loreto's regional
capital, Iquitos. A hamlet of some 3,000 people, it is
situated right opposite Block Eight, one of the main oil
wells.
The Achuar have lived in the region for thousands of years
Local people say there is still contamination and oil spills,
but now the Achuar have GPS transceivers to log the problems
where they find them.
Little by little there are signs of improvement.
But there is frustration on the part of Pluspetrol, which
has pledged to pay millions of dollars, that the government
is not playing a bigger role.
"This oil industry should be of benefit for everybody
- maybe today it's not of benefit to indigenous people
and the government should find the best way to solve that
problem," says Roberto Ramallo, general manager of
Pluspetrol Norte.
But the problem is that the Achuar and other tribes live
on top of potentially enormous reserves of crude oil.
Thanks to an intense drive to auction it off, almost three-quarters
of the Peruvian Amazon is leased for oil exploration and
extraction.
High global demand and the price of oil is also making
companies look at the Peruvian Amazon as an attractive
prospect, but is it sustainable?
"All of this petroleum exploration in the Amazon
is a grand experiment," says Bill Powers of E-Tech,
a not-for-profit engineering firm.
"It's
just coming into the jungle, developing the resource,
getting the economic benefit and historically
it's been whatever happens to whoever was there before,
happens.
"There's
no plan, there's no effort made to ensure that they maintain
their cultural integrity or that they
have something to do once the rivers and the forest don't
provide what they used to provide."
Future plans
Carbon trading schemes have yet to reach this part of
the Amazon and the oil boom is not the only threat.
President Alan Garcia has proposed privatising large areas
of the rainforest, but local officials say the government
in Lima does not understand the impact this would have.
Pluspetrol Norte says oil should benefit everyone
The regional president of Loreto, Ivan Vasquez, says the
Amazon needs to preserve its diversity at all costs.
"The
ecosystem is the genetic bank of the Amazon, as it brings
together genetic matrices which don't exist
anywhere else - thousands of interconnected genetic bases.
"That
is our capital, the genetic bank that we have to preserve
for humanity, and for the world."
The Achuar have so far rejected new oil exploration on
their territory.
Their story is an emblematic case of resistance for indigenous
Amazonians and is unprecedented in Peru.
But the Peruvian rainforest, the biggest stretch of Amazon
outside Brazil, is still the focus of the relentless global
hunt to find new sources of fossil fuels.
Story by Dan Collyns from BBC
BBC
21 03 08
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