cancel2 2022
Canceled
Another example of Americans exercising double standards, how much do you hear in your media about the role Chevron plays in Nigeria?
Chevron’s record in the Niger Delta includes extensive pollution and gas flaring, construction of facilities in communities without consultation, and support for military repression. In May 1998, Chevron ended a non-violent occupation of its Parabe platform by flying in Nigerian soldiers who opened fire on protesters with assault rifles, killing two people. In January 1999, Chevron-leased helicopters and speedboats carried soldiers to the villages Opia and Ikenyan, where they attacked villagers and burned houses to the ground.
http://www.africaresource.com/index...ron-oil-pollution-and-human-rights&Itemid=346
For well over 50 years , Chevron has drilled on and offshore Nigeria for its petroleum wealth, generating riches that have flowed whether dictatorships or democracies govern the region and providing strong earnings for Chevron and its shareholders. For over half a century, the people and communities living near the shores of Africa’s richest oil boom have become poorer, more dispirited, and are living shorter lives while petroleum flows from their region. Oil operations in the Niger Delta have economically marginalized local villagers, while giving them virtually no control over their own livelihood,land or resources.
http://justiceinnigerianow.org/about-chevron
Here is an explosion on an oil rig operated by Chevron, in what looks remarkably like a rerun of Deepwater Horizon. Yet we are told that by a former Chevron bean counter that they have far safer working practices than BP and this can't happen!!
On Monday 16 January at 4.30 to 5am, Chevron's KS Endeavour drilling rig burst into flames, approximately 6 miles off the coast of Nigeria. Two workers are reported missing. The gas rig is still said to be burning for the second day running and is reported to have partially collapsed into the ocean. The cause is as yet unconfirmed, but early reports indicate that the explosion was partly the result of a failed blow out preventer (BOP), with parallels being drawn to the Deepwater Horizon disaster. The Nigerian state oil company, NNPC, speculated that Chevron's drillers lost control of gas pressure when equipment failure led to a "gas-kick".
Chevron has been criticised for its lack of transparency over the incident. Locals have been kept in the dark about Chevron's emergency response plan, the risk to the local population and any information about efforts to control the fire and limit the environmental damage. Chevron has also been silent about what the worst case scenario and what this means for its stakeholders.
http://platformlondon.org/2012/01/18/chevron-oil-rig-explodes-off-coast-of-nigeria-2-killed/
Chevron’s record in the Niger Delta includes extensive pollution and gas flaring, construction of facilities in communities without consultation, and support for military repression. In May 1998, Chevron ended a non-violent occupation of its Parabe platform by flying in Nigerian soldiers who opened fire on protesters with assault rifles, killing two people. In January 1999, Chevron-leased helicopters and speedboats carried soldiers to the villages Opia and Ikenyan, where they attacked villagers and burned houses to the ground.
http://www.africaresource.com/index...ron-oil-pollution-and-human-rights&Itemid=346
For well over 50 years , Chevron has drilled on and offshore Nigeria for its petroleum wealth, generating riches that have flowed whether dictatorships or democracies govern the region and providing strong earnings for Chevron and its shareholders. For over half a century, the people and communities living near the shores of Africa’s richest oil boom have become poorer, more dispirited, and are living shorter lives while petroleum flows from their region. Oil operations in the Niger Delta have economically marginalized local villagers, while giving them virtually no control over their own livelihood,land or resources.
http://justiceinnigerianow.org/about-chevron
Here is an explosion on an oil rig operated by Chevron, in what looks remarkably like a rerun of Deepwater Horizon. Yet we are told that by a former Chevron bean counter that they have far safer working practices than BP and this can't happen!!
On Monday 16 January at 4.30 to 5am, Chevron's KS Endeavour drilling rig burst into flames, approximately 6 miles off the coast of Nigeria. Two workers are reported missing. The gas rig is still said to be burning for the second day running and is reported to have partially collapsed into the ocean. The cause is as yet unconfirmed, but early reports indicate that the explosion was partly the result of a failed blow out preventer (BOP), with parallels being drawn to the Deepwater Horizon disaster. The Nigerian state oil company, NNPC, speculated that Chevron's drillers lost control of gas pressure when equipment failure led to a "gas-kick".
Chevron has been criticised for its lack of transparency over the incident. Locals have been kept in the dark about Chevron's emergency response plan, the risk to the local population and any information about efforts to control the fire and limit the environmental damage. Chevron has also been silent about what the worst case scenario and what this means for its stakeholders.
http://platformlondon.org/2012/01/18/chevron-oil-rig-explodes-off-coast-of-nigeria-2-killed/
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