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Environment

'Crude': The Film Chevron Doesn't Want You to See

By Han Shan, AlterNet. Posted August 26, 2009.


The new film exposes an environmental tragedy experts call the "Amazon Chernobyl," and believe is the worst case of oil-related contamination ever.
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American oil giant Chevron is now the 5th largest company on the planet. But I doubt Chevron executives have had much time to savor their 'Masters of the Universe' status lately. Instead, I imagine them working overtime with their internal public relations team and mercenary army of PR spinmasters, lobbyists, and sponsored bloggers they've brought on to fight what looks more and more like a losing battle. What's got them burning the midnight oil?

Two weeks from today, a powerful new documentary film is opening in New York, and then playing in select theaters across the country. Called CRUDE, the film tells a shocking story that Chevron does not want the world to know.

Three years in the making by acclaimed filmmaker Joe Berlinger (Brother's Keeper, Paradise Lost, and Metallica: Some Kind of Monster), CRUDE chronicles the epic legal battle to hold Chevron accountable for its systematic contamination of the Ecuadorian Amazon -- an environmental tragedy experts call the "Amazon Chernobyl," and believe is the worst case of oil-related contamination on Earth. While drilling in the Ecuadorian Amazon from 1964 to 1990, Texaco, now Chevron, deliberately dumped more than 18 billion gallons of toxic wastewater, spilled roughly 17 million gallons of crude oil, and left hazardous waste in hundreds of open pits dug out of the forest floor. The company operated using substandard practices that were obsolete in order to increase its profit margin by $3 per barrel of crude. Of course, the local people and ecosystems paid the price instead, but they're fighting back.

Centering on a landmark lawsuit filed by the indigenous people and campesinos who continue to suffer a severe public health crisis caused by Chevron's contamination, CRUDE is a high-stakes David vs. Goliath legal drama with 30,000 Amazon rainforest dwellers facing down the San Ramon, California-based oil behemoth.

Amazon Watch's Clean Up Ecuador Campaign - featured in the film - is leading grassroots efforts to promote the theatrical release, enlisting human rights and environmental allies across the U.S. in an outreach and word-of-mouth marketing campaign. Numerous organizations have pledged support and committed to concrete efforts to build the profile of this must-see film, including Rainforest Action Network, Oxfam USA, WITNESS, EarthRights International, Human Rights Watch, and Global Green, to name just a few.

CRUDE is not a simplistic piece of agit-prop. Filmmaker Joe Berlinger shows all sides of this monumental case and the stories and people behind it. Chevron is given plenty of opportunity to share its perspective. Unfortunately for them, in the end, truth does appear to pick a side and it's not Chevron's.

Watch the trailer below:


Ultimately, the film gives us a glimpse of the beauty and mystery of the Amazon and its indigenous cultures, and puts a human face on the devastation left there by three decades of oil operations. But it does a lot more. Among other things, it also tells the story of what it takes to go up against one of the most powerful companies on the planet.

Especially inspiring is the story of Pablo Fajardo, the young former oil field worker who completed his law degree by correspondence course and is now the lead attorney for the plaintiffs. Pablo argues passionately and courageously for the impacted communities, and you won't be able to help cheering him on.


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See more stories tagged with: oil, amazon, chevron, crude

Han Shan is a human rights and environmental justice campaigner living in New York City. He is currently serving as a coordinator of the Clean Up Ecuador campaign for Amazon Watch.

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Next time your...
Posted by: Farmertim on Aug 27, 2009 3:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
enjoying the breeze through the window on a crisp fall day, or the exceleration of the open road.....this is the cost.
We do not see it, are meant not to see it.
For if we did.. could we enjoy it or use it as we have.
If the dam in Northern Canada was in our back yard or flooded our ancestrial home, would our mindless flip of a switch be the same?
Doubt it...
FarmerTim

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"You can trust your car to the man who wears a star"
Posted by: americansheep on Aug 27, 2009 6:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...the old slogan of Texaco. What they censored was the second verse: "But you can't trust your Ecuadorian forest to the man who wears the star."

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Texaco would have been the cleanest oil company
Posted by: Habsberg on Aug 27, 2009 11:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
More bad news, the U.S. government may share some culpability. Texaco was stolen from the 60's to present with the government playing a key role. Not only were they short sighted in terms of environmental damage but the J. R. Ewing types were running a company by voting with stolen shares of stock. My inheritance featured enough preferred shares of Texaco stock to control the company. I was made aware of this in 1995. I'm an environmentalist that has more business sense than any of the thieves. I have more than once had to describe how an environmentalist would run an oil company.

The Texaco company should have been selling NASCAR fuel to you at your pump since 1996. No one from the board of an oil company can explain why a cleaner fuel is not available to the consumer. It only required a carburetor change, about $200 in 95. Put a NASCAR fuel burning automobile in a garage and you can run the car all you like, do the same with a gasoline powered vehicle and you will be dead in a few minutes. Extrapolate those effects to a city or the whole globe if you have an understanding of science. The economic model of selling a more refined product, that is more added value, is better business. Not only would it go well with the green crowd but with the NASCAR crowd as well.

I was informed that is was not in the consumer market because it burns clear, you can't see the flames in the instance of a fire. Mostly, I face groups of people that have a "win or go home" equation when we meet. They are only there to see if they can justify the theft. We have the video tapes to show they heard what I had to say. Texaco would have been the cleanest oil company if the U.S. courts and feds had not helped steal my inheritance.

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hope
Posted by: tazdelaney on Aug 27, 2009 11:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we can hope and work to see that this case doesn't go the way of others. exxon valdez, for instance. the original jury verdict called for a settlement of $10 billion, with half for the state and half for the native peoples. but exxon, now x-mob, fought it tooth and nail for almost 20 years, stalling and using their army of scum, er lawyers, to delay and move it into the jurisdiction of a 'sympathetic' (bribed) judge in california who a couple of years ago cut the settlement in half. then yet another judge cut it still further. finally payments were made that amounted to less than x-mobs record-breaking $42 billion A YEAR in PURE PROFIT earned them in just 6 weeks!

or how about the x-mob disaster under the streets of brooklyn where they managed to hide for years, bribing officials and just strong-arm denying it even happened... only now after 20 years is it being pursued by andrew cuomo. hope he sticks to his guns and accepts no poison golden apples...

by contrast, a couple of years after the valdez spill, this courageous group of folks from alaska who had helped with the massive cleanup of dead, oil-coated birds, fish, seals and shoreline... drove a big chemical can filled with such gook all the way to new york city, where i live. they then dumped this can into the large fountain and pool out in front of the rockefeller exxon building. unlike any execs at exxon after valdez, these people were promptly arrested and had the book thrown at them as TERRORISTS attacking a fine, upstanding american corporation. they did years of hard time and heavy fines for the cleanup of that pool.

take note that it was the GOP's SWASTIKA-TONGUED SENSENBRENNER AND WARMONGERING POWER-BITCH HILLARY CLINTON who sponsored the AETA, animal and environmental terrorism act of 2005. knowing that they faced at least a little fight, even in a 'terrorist'-hysterical congress like this one, so they played a cute trick to gain rapid, debateless passage – they called for a voice-vote when only 14 members of congress were in their seats back from xmas break. we call it demockery. well it says that if your activism causes any harm to the PR or income or properties of a corporation, that you are a terrorist and will be sentenced for that as well as any other charges, sent to prison and heavily fined... while the real terrorists gloat and guffaw in their lavish corporate and governmental offices...

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Heartbreaking
Posted by: willymack on Aug 27, 2009 12:10 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our assualt on Nature and Mother Earth
The evil of those who put profit and wealth above all else
The fact that the Evil Ones KNOW they're evil, as evidenced by their attempts at covering up their evil
The human race is BETTER than this
Or are we?

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» RE: Heartbreaking Posted by: eggnog2464
another
Posted by: tazdelaney on Aug 27, 2009 12:12 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
another relevant item re the AETA and the like as regards activism onenvironmental fronts. we thought it was a real howler. about the time wife and i met, back in '83; there was this guy who was pulling a marx brothers stunt on major polluters... he'd gather up a bunch of their muck into big paint canisters and, no kidding, manage to gain admittance to do a paint job on some top executive's office. after he'd laid down the muck, he'd paint over it with the real color til it looked like a paint job had been done, then leave. it would take a few days for the message to seep through...

by current definition, the man was a terrorist. like king george II called jefferson and franklin terrorists. like the boston tea party was terrorist. guess the 'indians' were terrorist at little big horn, too...

i think it just about says it all about contemporary american demockery that the AETA animal and environmental terrorism act is the law, and... then there's jane harman's 'violent radicalization and homegrown terrorism prevention act.' the first passed by trickery but the latter passed both house and senate overwhelmingly. it was then considered that it might get negative attention from the ACLU and maybe even the courts...

under the 'violent radicalization and homegrown terrorism prevention act' anyone like a franklin, jefferson, adams, payne or patrick henry is a terrorist prisonable for years.

in 1991, i read that the brief USG definition of 'terrorist' was 'a person or organization which advocates the use of force in the pursuit of a political ideology or cause; particularly in the case of an attempt to overthrow a legitimate government.'

it is crystal clear that since the first act of president george washington in launching the 115 year continuation of the war against the native population which had been ongoing since 1500... the defining aspect of american militarism and policy has been precisely that, time after time.

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» RE: another Posted by: 3rdI
It's fine
Posted by: Archie1954 on Aug 27, 2009 1:46 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to go after Chevron since it bought all the assets and liabilities of Texaco but what about the management of Texaco at the time all of this egregious activity was taking place? Why aren't they up on charges? They are responsible for destruction of the environment and lives of the indigenous people living in the area. Surely this is a criminal matter?

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» RE: It's fine Posted by: fisaticdreams
Chewrong
Posted by: AnnaKay on Aug 29, 2009 8:35 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Chevron definitely does not want anyone to see this documentary. It shows the horrible truth about the mess Chevron/Texaco left in Ecuador. So far no relief has been offered to the people suffering from the contamination.
We have to do everything we can to make sure Chevron is held responsible!
Here's an interesting blog: http://www.thechevronpit.blogspot.com

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Nike Dunk
Posted by: mjx729 on Aug 31, 2009 7:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Japan's Kyodo News quoted the Nike Dunks Democratic Party, 31 members of the news reports, the Democratic Party executive committee meet in the evening of 30 Nike Dunk SB, the Democratic Party is currently the party's first deputy Naoto Kan, or Katsuya Okada, Nike Dunk secretary general of a person or Nike Dunk High could become a Cabinet Secretary-General Hatoyama Cabinet. Kyodo News analysis, to convene Nike Dunk Low a special session of Congress in mid-period, Nike Air Max Hatoyama likely to September 14 was elected the new Prime Minister in Parliament, the new Air Max Shoes cabinet may be issued on September 18. Hatoyama 31, evening at a press conference to Air Max 90 formally announced the creation of national strategies Bureau of news.

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Those thinking about long-term recovery,
Posted by: reg373 on Sep 1, 2009 12:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...know the enviroment will be a big winner in the conversion to biofuels & biopower -- found a cool site; Balkingpoints ; incredible satellite view of earth

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aion gold
Posted by: deace08 on Sep 9, 2009 2:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Kina or Kinah is the currency in Aion: Tower of Eternity, we also call it aion gold. The latest news I get is that this game will be avaiable for our gamers on september 22rd. According to my friend, it is really a fun game, if you play it, I suggest you purchase aion cd key to wait for its arrival. Meanwhile, don’t forget aion time card, which is also vital to activate your aion account. So just pay more attention to all things about aion is wise choice. And you may note aion power leveling service which would bring convience for you.

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One links of london sale, One Dream
Posted by: jamie1990 on Sep 19, 2009 6:42 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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