Toxins
2004 – Chevron Texaco Corp.
WHEREAS:
Through its "TexPet"
subsidiary, Texaco extracted over 1.5 billion barrels of oil from the
Ecuadorian Amazon between 1971 and 1992. Texaco was acquired by ChevronTexaco
in 2001.
An estimated 16.8 million
barrels of oil were spilled from the pipeline during this time, contaminating
land and water. None of the hundreds of oil spills from Texaco operations were
adequately remediated.
It is estimated that over 20
years of operations in Ecuador, Texaco systematically dumped 18.5 billion
gallons of toxic waste waters into open unlined pits (New York Times,
10/24/03), or directly into streams, rivers, or swamps although it was
standard practice at the time in the
U.S. to re-inject formation waters into the ground in the oil production
process.
Texaco completed a limited
cleanup of 207 of the 627 unlined toxic waste pits through an agreement with
the Ecuadorian government in 1998. The baseline of this cleanup was set by an
environmental audit conducted by a consultancy overseen by Texaco and Petroecuador,
Ecuador's state oil company. Texaco did not address groundwater contamination
in its remediation activities.
Evidence has emerged that
challenges the adequacy of Texaco's environmental cleanup:
* Waste pits approved as
"clean" contained hydrocarbon levels 50-500 times that permitted in
the U.S.
* A 10/03 study by Petroecuador
and Frente de Defensa de la Amazonia tested soil and water samples from 323
wells and 627 waste pools left over in camps operated by Texaco. It found
hydrocarbon contamination exceeding levels set by Ecuadorian environmental law.
* The Petroecuador study also
revealed the severe hydrocarbon contamination of five large wetland areas next
to Texaco facilities.
Studies have linked Texaco's
soil and water contamination to devastating health impacts on neighboring
communities:
* A 1994 study conducted by the
Center for Economic and Social Rights found that water samples from drinking,
bathing and fishing sources used by communities living near the contamination
sites contained levels of PAHs up to 1,000 times greater than the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency's safety guidelines.
* A 2000 study by the London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and Ecuadorian health authorities found
eight types of cancer in San Carlos, a community near former Texaco wells, and
that the incidences of these cancers are far exceed historical norms.
* According to the Petroecuador
study, exposure to and consumption of the contaminated waters has led to
numerous types of infections and cancers.
RESOLVED: The shareholders
request that ChevronTexaco's Board prepare a report on new initiatives
instituted by management to address the specific health and environmental
concerns of villagers living near unremediated waste pits and other sources of
oil-related contamination in the area where Texaco operated in Ecuador.
SUPPORTING STATEMENT
In our view, Texaco's cleanup
efforts were inadequate and our company has a continuing ethical obligation to
redress the outstanding environment and health consequences of its activities
in Ecuador. Negative publicity generated by this situation damages our
credibility as an environmentally responsible corporate citizen and jeopardizes
our ability to compete in the global marketplace.
Sponsors:
Lead: Trillium Asset Management, Ms. Shelley
Alpern; Jolt Coalition; Rockefeller
and Co.