ALREADY, the Canadian government is completely ignoring the findings of the Obama's administration efforts with mitigating the climate crisis.
This is corruption as thick as pea soup.
By SIMON ROMERO and CLIFFORD KRAUSS
This is corruption as thick as pea soup.
By SIMON ROMERO and CLIFFORD KRAUSS
Published: May 14, 2009
SHUSHUFINDI, Ecuador (click here) — Mention to Anita Ruíz the name of the giant oil company Chevron,
and she trembles with rage. At her wooden hut here in the Amazon
forest, where oil-project flares illuminate the night sky, she points to
a portrait of her youngest son, who died seven years ago of leukemia at
age 16.
“We believe the American oilmen created the pollution that killed my son,” said Ms. Ruíz, 58, who lives in a clearing where Texaco, the American oil company that Chevron acquired in 2001, once poured oil waste into pits used decades ago for drilling wells.
Texaco’s roughnecks are long gone, but black gunk from the pits seeps to the topsoil here and in dozens of other spots in Ecuador’s northeastern jungle. These days the only Chevron employees who visit the former oil fields, in a region where resentment against the company runs high, do so escorted by bodyguards toting guns.
They represent one side in a bitter fight that is developing into the world’s largest environmental lawsuit, with $27 billion in potential damages....
“We believe the American oilmen created the pollution that killed my son,” said Ms. Ruíz, 58, who lives in a clearing where Texaco, the American oil company that Chevron acquired in 2001, once poured oil waste into pits used decades ago for drilling wells.
Texaco’s roughnecks are long gone, but black gunk from the pits seeps to the topsoil here and in dozens of other spots in Ecuador’s northeastern jungle. These days the only Chevron employees who visit the former oil fields, in a region where resentment against the company runs high, do so escorted by bodyguards toting guns.
They represent one side in a bitter fight that is developing into the world’s largest environmental lawsuit, with $27 billion in potential damages....