Don't let Chevron get away with environmental crimes in Brazil!
source: http://amazonwatch.org/take-action/dont-let-chevron-get-away-with-environmental-crimes-in-br...
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- JanforGore
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whatever environmental mess they want."
Those were the words of Carlos Minc, Rio de Janeiro state's environment secretary, in response to Chevron's oil spill off the Atlantic coast of Brazil. Judging from his statements to the press, Minc has grown increasingly frustrated with Chevron's actions following the spill.
Anyone familiar with the ongoing battle to bring Chevron to justice in Ecuador knows that the company will do everything it can to protect its profits even at the expense of the planet and human health. Brazilian officials are determined to make Chevron pay for the impacts of its reckless business operations. Send key environmental officials in Brazil a message now to let them know you've got their back.
It isn't just Chevron's response to the spill that has been criticized. Before and after the spill occurred, Chevron showed shockingly little concern about the risks involved. The company reportedly drilled deeper than it was licensed to, and had to borrow sonar equipment to even locate where the leak was occurring. Chevron was completely unprepared for an oil spill – or perhaps I should say, completely unconcerned. Production and profits are all that really matter to Chevron.
No wonder Carlos Minc has also been quoted saying: "We believe the accident could've been avoided. There was an environmental crime. [Chevron] hid information and their emergency team took almost 10 days to start acting."
Brazil's National Petroleum Agency says more than 110,000 gallons of oil have spilled into the Atlantic Ocean. Write to Carlos Minc and other key Brazilian environmental officials now and urge them to hold Chevron accountable for every last drop.
For a cleaner future,
Mitch Anderson
Corporate Campaigns Director
P.S. AlterNet recently named Chevron the #1 "Most Toxic Energy Company," a label the company richly deserves. Even while it refuses to pay to clean up its messes in Ecuador and around the world, Chevron is spending huge sums of money to influence public policy in a preemptive bid to never be held accountable for the damage it does to the planet. Share this story to help expose Chevron and other energy companies that are polluting our political process.
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Dusty_King
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Make laws that take away their revenue, all revenue, so the shareholders don't get paid until the clean is cleaned up COMPLETELY. If the oil companies don't like they can do business elsewhere. Needs to be enacted worldwide.
- 6 months ago
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Dusty_King
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JanforGore
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http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/world_now/2011/11/chevron-faces-fines-in-huge-oi...
Chevron to face 28 million in fines. Another drop in the bucket.
"Brazil's environmental agency says Chevron will be fined nearly $28 million for an oil spill at a well off the coast of Rio de Janeiro, which occurred as the country gears for one of the world's largest and most challenging deep-water oil exploration projects.
Officials said this week that an investigation into the leak, which began Nov. 7, is ongoing. Penalties against the company could rise to more than $140 million, and Chevron could be banned from participation in Brazil's upcoming “pre-salt” oil projects, they said.
Chevron took responsibility for the spill. But the government also accuses Chevron of mismanaging the cleanup and of presenting an evacuation plan which relied upon equipment that Chevron did not have in the country at the time, Brazil's National Petroleum Agency, or ANP, said late Tuesday (link in Portuguese).
The leak, which has already been largely contained, was small compared with last year's Gulf of Mexico oil spill, and Chevron currently has relatively limited operations in Brazil. But the leak is likely to prove an important reminder of the environmental risks the country faces in its plans to develop its newfound oil wealth, analysts say.
The discovery of the pre-salt reserves in 2007, so-called because they lie under a hard-to-penetrate layer of salt and rock deep below the ocean's surface, gave Brazil the chance to be an oil exporter in the ranks of Kuwait or Russia.
Last year Petrobras, the state-run oil company that will lead the drilling efforts, completed the largest share issuance in history to prepare for investments that will total up to $224 billion over the next five years.
“This is huge ... and from a geological and logistics perspective it is very challenging,” Erasto Almeida, a Latin America energy analyst at Eurasia Group in New York, said in an interview. “We assume the risks of accidents are considerable.”
“The government's strong reaction to the spill is clear indication not only that they are irritated with Chevron for what they perceive as inefficient action, or because the company didn't share all information,” Almeida said, “but also that they are concerned about the risk of new accidents in the sector.”
- 6 months ago
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JanforGore
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Scott_Pert [removed]
- This comment was removed by its owner.
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Scott_Pert [removed]
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JanforGore
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Scott_Pert:
They lie.
- 6 months ago
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JanforGore
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Progresshiv
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Thank you. Signed, voted up, and tweeted.
- 6 months ago
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Progresshiv
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Scott_Pert [removed]
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Progresshiv: This comment was removed by its owner.
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Scott_Pert [removed]
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JanforGore
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Progresshiv:
Much appreciated.
- 6 months ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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Scott_Pert:
Thank you.
- 6 months ago
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JanforGore