Chevron's Top Ten Lies

Chevron’s Ten Biggest Lies About the Ecuador Suit
 

(For more detail and citations, click here for long version)
 
Does Chevron respect the law and human rights in Ecuador? On its website Chevron has
pledged to “conduct business in a socially responsible and ethical manner” and “to
respect the communities” where it operates.  But Chevron’s conduct in the historic
environmental trial in Ecuador’s rainforest – where damages have been assessed at $27
billion – can hardly be considered “ethical” or respectful.  Texaco (now Chevron) was
the exclusive operator of an oil concession in Ecuador’s rainforest from 1964 to 1990.  
To keep costs to a minimum, the company systematically dumped into Amazon waterways
18 billion gallons of toxic waste in an area that was home to six indigenous groups  – one
of which is now extinct, and five of which have lost most of their ancestral lands. 
Chevron inherited this problem when it bought Texaco in 2001.  Chevron’s ten biggest
lies about Ecuador follow.
 
Chevron Lie #1: Texaco’s operational practices caused no harm to the environment
 
Texaco admits that it deliberately dumped billions of gallons of toxic “water of
formation” directly into the waterways and forests of Ecuador’s Amazon region between
1964 and 1990.  It also abandoned more than 900 open waste pits filled with toxic sludge
that include carcinogenic chemicals such as chromium VI and benzene.  For decades
these pits have been leaching toxins into groundwater, soils, and streams that the local
population relies on for drinking water.  Experts call the area the “Amazon Chernobyl”. 
 
Chevron Lie #2:  Scientific evidence at trial proves Texaco caused no harm
 
An independent, court-appointed expert – assisted by 14 independent scientists --
reviewed more than 60,000 chemical sampling results provided as evidence by Chevron,
the plaintiffs, and various third-parties.  The expert report concluded that 100% of the 94
former Texaco well sites and production stations inspected during the trial were highly
contaminated with toxins harmful to human health.  Damages were determined to be as
high as $27 billion.
 
Chevron Lie #3:  Texaco’s operational practices were customary for the industry

 
Chevron’s practices in Ecuador violated industry customs and legal norms by almost
every conceivable measure.  The dumping of “water of formation” had been outlawed in
the oil-friendly state of Louisiana in 1942.  In 1939, Texas outlawed open-air toxic waste
pits of the type Chevron built in Ecuador throughout the 1970s and 1980s.  The entire oil
industry was moving away from the waste disposal methods Texaco used in Ecuador as
early as the 1920s.  
 
Chevron Lie #4:  The dumping of toxic “waste water” poses no health risk
 
The U.S. government links hydrocarbon exposure to cancer, reproductive problems,
nervous system damage, immune system impairment, and a host of other health
problems.  One academic study found rates of cancer in the area Texaco operated 130%
above Ecuador’s norm. The court-appointed expert in Ecuador, using population and
epidemiological data, estimated the contamination in the region where Texaco operated
produced more than 1,400 excess cancer deaths.
 
Chevron Lie #5:  Texaco remediated the damage

 
It is clear from the scientific evidence in the trial that Texaco’s self-described
“remediation” was nothing more than an elaborately choreographed fraud.  The court
expert found no difference in levels of contamination between sites Texaco claimed to
have remediated, and those that had been left untouched.  Two Chevron lawyers and
seven former Ecuadorian government officials are now under criminal indictment for
lying about the remediation results.
 
Chevron Lie #6:  The Ecuador trial court is biased against Chevron

 
To transfer the case to Ecuador from U.S. federal court, Chevron submitted numerous
sworn statements praising Ecuador’s courts as fair and adequate.  Once the evidence
pointed to Chevron’s culpability, the company began to attack the process as unfair.  Yet
Ecuador has afforded Chevron more due process than probably any defendant in history:
the company has presented more than 50,000 chemical sampling results and almost
200,000 pages of evidence.  Chevron’s approach is to clear: praise foreign courts when
you think you can win, and criticize them when you think you will lose.  
 
Chevron Lie #7:  The plaintiffs are undermining the due process rights of Chevron
 
Chevron is trying to politicize the trial and undermine the legal rights of the plaintiffs. 
Chevron fabricated a military report used to suspend a critical field inspection on
indigenous territory.  Case materials have mysteriously disappeared from the law offices
of the plaintiffs.  Death threats against lawyers for the communities have been
commonplace.  Chevron has tried to shut down the trial by lobbying elected officials in
the U.S. and Ecuador.
 
Chevron Lie #8: Soil samples show no contamination
 
Borrowing the tactics of the tobacco industry, Chevron manufactures junk science to
distract people from the real issues. Chevron asserts on its website that 99% of all
samples taken at the Lago trial pose no threat to human health or the environment.  Yet
dozens of these so-called “remediated” sites contain levels of dangerous toxins up to
thousands of times higher than permitted by U.S. and Ecuadorian law.  
 
Chevron Lie #9: The responsibility for further remediation rests with Petroecuador
 
Texaco – not Petroecuador – exclusively designed, built, and operated all of the oil
production stations that are issue in the trial.  From a legal standpoint, Chevron is not
only liable for Texaco’s pollution – which continues leaching into soils and groundwater
– but also for contamination caused by the continued use of Texaco’s flawed equipment. 
Chevron can sue Petroecuador if it feels that company should share the responsibility.
 
Chevron Lie #10:  The Court-appointed expert is neither qualified nor neutral
 
Cabrera is a highly respected environmental engineering consultant in Ecuador who has
worked for a multitude of oil companies.  For his work for the court in the Chevron case,
he collaborated with a team of 14 independent scientists to review thousands of pages of
evidence.  More than 25 Ecuadorian and American scientists have reviewed the Cabrera
report and found its conclusions reasonable.  They also found the amount of damages to
be consistent with those at other large environmental disasters around the world.
 
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Purveyors of Chevron's Fraud

Rodrigo PEREZ PALLARES

"Children all over the world get cancer"

Rodrigo PEREZ PALLARES

CHEVRON ATTORNEY UNDER INDICTMENT FOR SIGNING FRAUDULENT CLEAN-UP AGREEMENT ON THE OIL GIANT´S BEHALF, THEREBY SELLING OUT THE HEALTH OF HIS OWN PEOPLE. HE SAYS THAT "CHILDREN ALL OVER THE WORLD GET CANCER."

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Myths QA 20SEP06.pdf (55.70 KB)
 
Does Chevron respect the law and human rights in Ecuador? You decide.  On its website Chevron pledges to “conduct business in a socially responsible and ethical manner” and “to respect the communities” where it operates.  But Chevron’s defense in the historic environmental trial in Ecuador’s rainforest (“Lago trial”) can hardly be considered “ethical” or respectful of human rights.

VIDEO REPORT
CHEVRON: THE REAL HUMAN STORY IN ECUADOR
(5:00 mins)