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Big Oil Attempts to Destroy World's Most Biodiverse Rainforest

Promoted by the editors

I have walked in a few rainforests in my lifetime, mostly in Australia and Indonesia. I would never forget the time I spent trekking through the majestic Kakadu National Park trails and being entranced by the amazingly luscious layers of its tropical rainforest, teeming with life and fragile ecosystems. I have witnessed the long-tailed Balinese Macaques playing with one another and trying to steal my lunch in the Ubud santuary, a short visit to Sumatra took me to the Harapan rainforest which is home, among other species, to an astounding array of charismatic butterflies....but I have never been to the Yasuni National Park in the north-east of Ecuador and that's what I want to discuss in this diary.

Having received an urgent email from an Australian eco-friend outlining exactly what's at stake, I have done some researching and came across this telling document (linked below). Recently, scientists have identified what they call the most "biodiverse region on our planet" (details of which can be found here, warning: this is long and meticulously catalogued, a real treat for those who like to read about "the lungs of our globe"!), and this rich torrent of life is to be found, you guessed it, at the Yasuni rainforest. Why is this attracting international attention, you may ask?

The Yasuní is one of the most bio-diverse places on the planet. It spans nearly a million hectares and is home to the greatest genetic variety of plants and animals on earth. It is thought to be a zone that did not freeze during the last ice-age, which began 2 million years ago and lasted up to 10,000 years ago. As a result, it became an island of vegetation where flora and fauna took refuge, survived and eventually re-populated the Amazon.

Just a part of Yasuni’s northern fringe, the 6.5sq km (1,600 acre) Tiputini Biodiversity Station, is the richest place in the world for bats, with an estimated 100 different species. The Tiputini Biodiversity Station is home to 247 amphibian and reptile species, 550 bird species and around 200 mammal species, including 10 primates and an array of large predators.

Big oil, once again, is threatening this most bountiful forest simply because Ecuador's second largest untapped oil reserves happen to lie directly below that region. Second largest? What happened to the first one? Well, as you can read below some of the usual suspects have managed to nearly destroy parts of the western rainforest and killing many indigenous people in the process. To do justice to this story would take a lot more than a single diary. I have not seen "Avatar" as yet but I understand that James Cameron's film is about an alien tribe on a distant planet who is fighting to save their lush forest home from human invaders bent on mining its minerals and riches. Sounds familiar? This mining company in question brings Blackwater-like thugs for "security" and will stop at nothing to secure profits for its shareholders. Déjà vu?

A battle of a different kind is ongoing in Ecuador. Oil giant Chevron is currently in a $27 billion lawsuit with Ecuadorian indigenous tribes for environmental damage caused by Texaco, a company acquired by Chevron in 2001. In court Texaco has admitted to dumping 18 billion gallons of toxic waste inside Ecuador's rainforest from 1964-1990. A court expert found contamination at every one of Texaco's former well sites, estimating oil damages 30 times larger than the infamous Exxon-Valdez spill and spanning an area the size of Rhode Island.

The case, known to some as the 'Amazon Chernobyl', involves 30,000 indigenous Ecuadorian plaintiffs. The toxic spill impacted six indigenous tribes, one of which has vanished entirely. The court has found that over 1,400 people have suffered untimely deaths from cancer due to contamination from the oil spill.

Despite these facts, Chevron has gone to great lengths to avoid reparations for environmental damage. In 2008 it was revealed that Chevron hired key political players, including former Senate majority leader Trent Lott and John McCain fund-raiser Wayne Berman to lobby United States Trade Representative Susan Schwab, members of Congress, and Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte to threaten suspending US trade preferences with Ecuador until the lawsuit was dropped. But the corporation's attempt to use US political power to disenfranchise 30,000 indigenous people failed.

Ok, the pic above is not from the Yasuni National park (it's the equally stunning San Rafael Falls, north east of Quito, still in Ecuador) but I put it there to underline the obvious point I'm trying to make. We're not looking after this planet the way we should. Not by a long shot.

If you'd like to read more about this, here is a good site run by the Yasuní depends on you! that deals with the latest news, and you can also sign the petition to keep the oil underground, which will be sent to the Prime Minister of Ecuador.

Why are rainforests so important to us? The short version (I don't want to preach to the choir here) is that they provide a home to many plants, animals and insects, they help stabilize the world's climate (though some -denialist- OK Senator might not understand this implication), they also protect against flood, drought, and erosion and support its indigenous people and their cultures. The rainforests are also generous as you can read below:

About 1/4 of all the medicines we use come from rainforest plants. Curare comes from a tropical vine, and is used as an anesthetic and to relax muscles during surgery. Quinine, from the cinchona tree, is used to treat malaria. A person with lymphocytic leukemia has a 99% chance that the disease will go into remission because of the rosy periwinkle. More than 1,400 varieties of tropical plants are thought to be potential cures for cancer.

The present Ecuadorian government is sort of trying to play big oil and has come up with a novel way of avoiding the mistakes of the first -exploitation- exploration by asking the world community to give the country some $300 million a year to keep the oil where it is. The news below is from last week. It first appeared on the CBS site but it seems to have been, well, missing, as the page is no longer available.

QUITO, Ecuador – Ecuador's foreign minister resigned Tuesday after President Rafael Correa criticized his handling of negotiations to prevent oil drilling in a pristine Amazon reserve. Fander Falconi was the third government official to resign over a plan to seek international donations of $3 billion over the next 10 years to keep an estimated 850 million barrels of heavy crude oil under the ground in the remote Yasuni National Park. Prospective donors have demanded some control over how the money is spent and asked Ecuador to expand the amount of land protected from development under the initiative.

A last, sobering word on the disappearance of rainforests worldwide:

In 1900, Sumatra had 16 million hectares of lowland forest; today that figure has dwindled to a mere 500,000 hectares. Lowland forests in Sumatra are now regarded as among the most threatened forests in the world.

GreenRoots is a new environmental series created by Meteor Blades and Patriot Daily for Daily Kos. This series provides a forum for educating, brainstorming, discussing and taking action on various environmental topics.

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Damn! I still can't manage to center the pics!


Oh well, one day...

Big Oil Attempts


I had the opportunity to go as a company; my wife and I had a small company that dealt in oil and gas, repairs of oil wells. Russia was looking for such capability. So in 2001, I went with a team of people who did various different projects. We were the ones who did down hole repairs on oil wells.
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It is one thing for you or me or Cameron


to make the connection between the film and current reality. What is interesting is that tribal and indigenous people make it as well. Survival International quotes a Kalahari Bushman:

We the Bushmen are the first inhabitants in southern Africa. We are being denied rights to our land and appeal to the world to help us. 'Avatar' makes me happy as it shows the world about what it is to be a Bushman, and what our land is to us. Land and Bushmen are the same.

Wow!


I'm not at all surprised. It's plain obvious....except for the MSM who does not report much on these atrocities.

This may interest you.


A major synthesis of knowledge concerning near term needs concludes that half the land area of British Columbia must be managed for climate mitigation and adaptation and to preserve biodiversity (roughly 15% is currently). Half may be a pretty good estimate everywhere.

A New Climate for Conservation - Nature, Carbon and Climate Change in British Columbia Link is to the press release, which contains links to the report, summaries and supporting material.

Author Jim Pojar:

A minimum conservation target of 50% is what's necessary to give our plants and animals a fighting chance to adapt, while also keeping and drawing more carbon out of the atmosphere so that over time we can slow and reduce climate change.

Nothing too exotic, just killer whales and spirit bears.

If the rich nations remain unwilling to set an example, well I think you know how it will end.

Sadly, yes.


If the rich nations remain unwilling to set an example, well I think you know how it will end.

Thanks for the link, will take a look tomorrow when things slow down a little.

Avatar in Quito


hat tip to, and more at Avatar in the Amazon

A telling line.


As for Ecuador’s President Correa, he saw the movie with his children the day after it premiered in Ecuador. No word yet on what he thought of it.

I think that Correa is pretty much in the paws of Big Oil, he certainly acts like it.

Re: Big Oil Attempts to Destroy World's Most Biodiverse Rainfore


I think it's a long way to reflect on this.It's a long time issue and we are almost on the edge to destroying our place that we live in.We don't nearly realize the essence of this place.People are very vulnerable and wanted to attain the most and valuable resources are blinded by the unnecessary materials we dreamed about not realizing the most important thing in life which is life and the essenc of it.All we care about is money,John Murtha for instance,Granted, he might have been kind of in favor of a lot of "pork" spending, which isn't the greatest thing to advocate for, but John or Jack Murtha as a lot of people called him,was at least a fierce advocate for his constituency (he tried to get a lot of money spent in Pennsylvania) and was also one of the biggest Democrat critics of the Iraq War,which Obama has yet to wrap up.

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Are certainly worth protecting and given the ecological disaster we are heading for it is vital this is stopped. People are reliant on credit and mortgage exit fees to gather necessary funding. There needs to be something done, and it needs to happen quickly to lessen the long term ecological, adverse effects.

Re: Big Oil Attempts to Destroy World's Most Biodiverse Rainfore


Our govt. must take concrete steps to minimize the adverse effects of this oil spill. Otherwise we will have to pay a big price for this oil spill.
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Re: Re: Big Oil Attempts to Destroy World's Most Biodiverse Rain


It's a worst thing ever happened. Worse than the news that struck us most. A student of Keenon Aampay Hall has accused her of sexual relationships with him. After the boy failed Hall's class he went to the school board with this news.

Re: Big Oil Attempts to Destroy World's Most Biodiverse Rainfore


Although, one could argue that due to the government restriction that make it easier and more cost effective to try to maintain an old failing rig than to build a new, safer one...it is partly their fault.
Either way, it's BP's mess. I'm not interested in the expecting the Federal Government, IE using the people's money, to fix MORE private company messes.
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Re: Big Oil Attempts to Destroy World's Most Biodiverse Rainfore


Natural ecosystem "food chain" will be seriously disrupted, as many coastal and aquatic life will surely perish--lending not only environmental impacts to affected areas--but businesses reliant on area aquatic life will also perish with it. In short: wild life AND people will suffer dire consequences from this oil spill---and the effects may span years, even decades.
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