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Reports

Chevron, Shell and the True Cost of Oil

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Posted on May 26, 2009

By Amy Goodman

  The economy is a shambles, unemployment is soaring, the auto industry is collapsing. But profits are higher than ever at oil companies Chevron and Shell. Yet across the globe, from the Ecuadorian jungle, to the Niger Delta in Nigeria, to the courtrooms and streets of New York and San Ramon, Calif., people are fighting back against the world’s oil giants.

  Shell and Chevron are in the spotlight this week, with shareholder meetings and a historic trial being held.

  On May 13, the Nigerian military launched an assault on villages in that nation’s oil-rich Niger Delta. Hundreds of civilians are feared killed in the attack. According to Amnesty International, a celebration in the delta village of Oporoza was attacked. An eyewitness told the organization: “I heard the sound of aircraft; I saw two military helicopters, shooting at the houses, at the palace, shooting at us. We had to run for safety into the forest. In the bush, I heard adults crying, so many mothers could not find their children; everybody ran for their life.”

  Shell is facing a lawsuit in U.S. federal court, Wiwa v. Shell, based on Shell’s alleged collaboration with the Nigerian dictatorship in the 1990s in the violent suppression of the grass-roots movement of the Ogoni people of the Niger Delta. Shell exploits the oil riches there, causing displacement, pollution and deforestation. The suit also alleges that Shell helped suppress the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People and its charismatic leader, Ken Saro-Wiwa. Saro-Wiwa had been the writer of the most famous soap opera in Nigeria, but decided to throw his lot in with the Ogoni, whose land near the Niger Delta was crisscrossed with pipelines. The children of Ogoniland did not know a dark night, living beneath the flame—apartment-building-size gas flares that burned day and night, and that are illegal in the U.S.

  I interviewed Saro-Wiwa in 1994. He told me: “The oil companies like military dictatorships, because basically they can cheat with these dictatorships. The dictatorships are brutal to people, and they can deny the human rights of individuals and of communities quite easily, without compunction.” He added, “I am a marked man.” Saro-Wiwa returned to Nigeria and was arrested by the military junta. On Nov. 10, 1995, after a kangaroo show trial, Saro-Wiwa was hanged with eight other Ogoni activists.

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  In 1998, I traveled to the Niger Delta with journalist Jeremy Scahill. A Chevron executive there told us that Chevron flew troops from Nigeria’s notorious mobile police, the “kill ‘n’ go,” in a Chevron company helicopter to an oil barge that had been occupied by nonviolent protesters. Two protesters were killed, and many more were arrested and tortured.

  Oronto Douglas, one of Saro-Wiwa’s lawyers, told us: “It is very clear that Chevron, just like Shell, uses the military to protect its oil activities. They drill and they kill.”

  Chevron is the second-largest stakeholder (after French oil company Total) of the Yadana natural gas field and pipeline project, based in Burma (which the military junta renamed Myanmar). The pipeline provides the single largest source of income to the military junta, amounting to close to $1 billion in 2007. Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, popularly elected the leader of Burma in 1990, has been under house arrest for 14 of the past 20 years, and is standing trial again this week. [On Tuesday the government said it had ended the house arrest of Suu Kyi, but she remains in detention pending the outcome of the trial.] The U.S. government has barred U.S. companies from investing in Burma since 1997, but Chevron has a waiver, inherited when it acquired the oil company Unocal.

  Chevron’s litany of similar abuses, from the Philippines to Kazakhstan, Chad-Cameroon, Iraq, Ecuador and Angola and across the U.S. and Canada, is detailed in an “alternative annual report” prepared by a consortium of nongovernmental organizations and is being distributed to Chevron shareholders at this week’s annual meeting, and to the public at TrueCostofChevron.com.

  Chevron is being investigated by New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo about whether the company was “accurate and complete” in describing potential legal liabilities. It enjoys, though, a long tradition of hiring politically powerful people. Condoleezza Rice was a longtime director of the company (there was even a supertanker named after her), and the recently hired general counsel is none other than disgraced Pentagon lawyer William J. Haynes, who advocated for “harsh interrogation techniques,” including waterboarding. Gen. James L. Jones, President Barack Obama’s national security adviser, sat on the Chevron board of directors for most of 2008, until he received his high-level White House appointment.

  Saro-Wiwa said before he died, “We are going to demand our rights peacefully, nonviolently, and we shall win.” A global grass-roots movement is growing to do just that.
 
  Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column.
 
  Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 750 stations in North America. She is the co-author of “Standing Up to the Madness: Ordinary Heroes in Extraordinary Times,” recently released in paperback.

  © 2009 Amy Goodman

  Distributed by King Features Syndicate


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By Karess, April 27, 2011 at 10:45 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

IJWTS wow! Why can’t I think of tighns like that?

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By Julius N'Sama, May 28, 2009 at 8:12 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

If we could just take all of this energy and rage that’s being focused on Shell and instead put the focus on the Nigerian government, we might finally make progress in this world. Does anybody realise that Shell is only a minority investor in their Nigerian projects? That Shell did not hire the assassins? Does anybody care about the truth? Get off your butts, go to Port Harcourt or Abuja and see for yourself. Stop pre-judging without verifying the facts.

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By Pacheko, May 28, 2009 at 7:28 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Viva Chavez!

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By jonr, May 28, 2009 at 1:52 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Shifting the full cost of maintaining and defending imported oil could do several things for the economy…  First, it could shift the cost to where it belongs. 

Amortizing the (arguably) half of our defense budget needed to assure uninterrupted delivery to a per-gallon tax would result in an increase of something like $4 per gallon.  A hard thing to swallow, yes, and quite regressive at first, but how much more attractive energy efficient vehicles would become if the artificially LOW cost of delivering this product were more realistic.

Farm products would cost more because farmers would (rightly) need to pass on the costs to consumers.  Maybe tax subsidies could be reduced at the same time to keep things equitable.  It would become even more uneconomical to drive gas guzzling vehicles than it will be when gas goes back up to $120-150 per barrel in a few years because the total then will be more like $7-8 per gallon.

Mass transit will look much better.  WALKING will look much better.

There must come a time, at some point, when we get tired of subsidizing this whole mess with our income taxes and demand a shift to at least a partial use tax.  Maintaining the status quo just continues to subsidize the same nonsense year after year after year.

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By Bud, May 28, 2009 at 6:36 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

This recession has devastated our economy,destroyed the savings of individuals,and essentially wreaked havoc on innocent people.One of the elements that is needed,is to spend our way out of it.It’s called disposable income.However,the treasonous speculators on wall street are denying the american people this vital factor.EVERYONE OF THEM should be tried for treason.Where is our congressional representatives hiding?They are nothing more than thieving COWARDS!!!

 

 

 

 


how

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By Carlos in DC, May 27, 2009 at 1:42 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Please stop using the words Hispanic and Latina to describe Judge Sonia Sotomayor.

Most of the peoples from Latin America are of Native American or Indigenous, and African heritage.

The word Hispanic was created by racist Nixon administration in order to hide our true racial and cultural identities, in times of ultra right wings dictatorships in the Americas.

We brown people are not of European heritage exclusevely even if we speak Spanish, there are hundreds of millions of Native languages speakers and even African dialects in Latin America, where over half of the population are of Indigenous roots and one third are Black people.

Thanks and please I am requesting you respectfully to stop using those words. Judge Sotomayor is an American of Puerto Rican descent.

There is not such a thing as Hispanics unless you are born in Spain or you descend from Spaniards. For many of us to be called as the slavers of our ancestors is nothing but an insult.

Please do not follow the mainstream media and U.S. government racism. That would mean that you are just like the rest of them.

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By ender, May 27, 2009 at 11:12 am Link to this comment

During the ‘oil crisis’ last year when gas hit $4.00 we had Dems and Repugs alike crying for the opening of more off shore drilling on the American Continental shelf.  The conversation never mentioned that we are a major exporter of oil already, and there is no such thing as ‘our oil’.  Once a company has a lease, they can sell that oil on the world market wherever it will bring the best return.  Since they have closed down or reduced output of many of their refineries, more of ‘our oil’ doesn’t even make sense.

Until we nationalize energy production we won’t stop Big Oil from running our Energy Policy.  We won’t get to using cleaner fuel until our national Energy Policy works for the benifit of US Citizens and not Big Oil. And we won’t stop being an empiralist nation until we get over our oil addiction.

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By Shirley, May 27, 2009 at 7:27 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Quit buying their products and watching programs that they sponsor

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By Purple Girl, May 27, 2009 at 4:00 am Link to this comment

Energy Independence will Come when All Nations Freeze and Seize these corps Assets and Reclaim the land they have allowed them to poach off.
These Energy Corps have not just committed countless Industrial Crimes- they have be committing Crimes against Humanity for nearly a century. It’s time to push them back on lands they actually Own.
Nowhere in our ‘Free market’ ideology does it exclude The People as competitve providers of any Product or service. In fact not only should our fomr of Gov’t be “Of,By and For the People” so should our Free market. This demand to control Oil Fields has created numerous ‘Blood For Oil’Wars- the main reason the Bushies were dragging their feet when We Demanded WE finally Get out of Iraq years ago..And what did we get in response from those who took the Oath to Protect,Defend and Serve US…“So”- nothing short of an outright confession of Treason.
Let’s be honest with ourselves we will never be ‘energy independent’ -regardless of the Source- as long as Profiteers and their surrogate Speculators on Wall Street control access and Distribution. If we go solar or Wind, pricing will be driven up due to future forecasts of Rain and mild Breezes.
Access to Energy resources are not just a Luxury, they are a bare essential to life and our economy. The Ability of these Logos to control one of our most basic needs as humans and as a nation is an outrage- WE the People control our own Destiny, not Logos.
Far Better to own and Control our own Destiny in a ‘socialistic’ manner than to be subserviant to the Powers of a Regime of ‘Communist’ Control over our most basic and essential resources.Enough of this Self imposed indentured Slavery to these Global ‘Family Crests’ who afford us nothing but Conflict and suffering just to pad their bottom line.
We need to not only take back that which is ours as natioal resources- we need to remove all essential commodities and resources from the Casino Gambling Tables of Stock markets world wide. Relegate those speculators to betting on I Phones v Blackberries or Revelon v Max Factor, commodities which do not effect human life, welfare or foreign policy.

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By knobcreekfarmer, May 27, 2009 at 2:30 am Link to this comment

“not much we the people can do.”

We can revolt!

But we have to all act as one voice. Which will be hard since they have done well keeping the Right and Left yelling at each other. Many are just now starting to awaken from a dream state only to realize we live in a nightmare.

re-boot America

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By liecatcher, May 26, 2009 at 10:40 pm Link to this comment

This evil has been going on a long, long time. The two oil men in the WHITE HOUSE accelerated the predation & when a gallon of gas got above $4 people
were forced to react.
With Obama things are going from bad to worse.The banksters used $trillions to buy & store oil in offshore supertankers driving oil from $35 to $62 per barrel. What the coal & natural gas miscreants are doing, mountain topping & toxic drilling is classic FASCISM. Now Obama appoints another PRO BUSINESS BUSHITE to the SUPREME COURT, & even though
the economy is in the toilet, the markets surged & oil hit a new recent hight of $62 plus.
So the true cost of oil is enslavement. Of course since the FASCISTS also control the main stream media,our food supply & soon our water supply, not
much we the people can do.

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By Reverb, May 26, 2009 at 8:41 pm Link to this comment

News about Chevron you won’t hear about on PBS’s Newshour with Jim Lehrer - they won’t bite the hand that feeds them - see this recent NYT piece:

<a >Lehrer Says ‘News Hour’ Money Woes Are Worst Ever</a>

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By Reverb, May 26, 2009 at 8:40 pm Link to this comment

News about Chevron you won’t hear about on PBS’s Newshour with Jim Lehrer - they won’t bite the hand that feeds them - see this recent NYT piece:

A href=“http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/19/business/media/19newshour.html>Lehrer Says ‘News Hour’ Money Woes Are Worst Ever</a>

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