Chevron in Ecuador

The archive of the Clean Up Ecuador campaign website


Indigenous Amazon Victims Call for Chevron to End Attempts to Sabotage Court System

Chevron Would Have Opportunity to Submit Information Before Court Issues Final Decree in Ecological Disaster Case

Amazon Defense Coalition

Amazon Defense Coalition
23 June 2010 - FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Karen Hinton at +1.703.798.3109


Quito, Ecuador – Lawyers representing the victims of a massive ecological disaster caused by Chevron's oil explorations in the Amazon rainforest have called on the company to end its reckless campaign to sabotage the Ecuadoran court system.

In a document submitted to the Ecuadoran court yesterday, the victims also proposed that the court give Chevron and the Amazonian communities a final opportunity to submit material that could assist the court in deciding the case.

"This case is being litigated in Ecuador because Chevron fought to have it moved here from the United States," said Steven Donziger, a lawyer for the victims. "But instead of defending the case, Chevron has waged war against the legal system, alleging fraud while essentially boycotting the proceedings. Their reckless and improper tactics must stop."

Donziger said it was ironic that Chevron has attacked the expert report concluding the company is responsible for more than $27 billion in damages because, from the outset, Chevron has refused to participate in the expert's assessment. Donziger called on the company to submit material to aid the court in reaching its final decision, which is expected soon.

In their submission, the victims said that "even though Chevron failed to participate meaningfully in the damages assessment process in the past, [the victims propose] giving both parties the opportunity to submit this supplementary information will satisfactorily resolve the outstanding controversy ... and thereby permit this judicial proceeding to have a normal development leading to the issuance of a final ruling."

"Because of the catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico, which has yet to reach the proportions of the vast amount of oil contaminating the Amazon, it's apparent that cleanup costs can be very large. So it is possible that the $27 billion amount in the expert's report may be insufficient to remediate the harm in Ecuador," Donziger said. "Under these circumstances, it's appropriate that both parties be given one last chance to submit information to the court."

Chevron has admitted to discharging more than 18 billion gallons of toxic "produced water" into Amazon waterways and forests from 1964 to 1990, when it was the sole operator of a large oil concession. The contamination has decimated indigenous groups and caused an outbreak of cancer that has accounted for at least 1,400 deaths, according to a damages assessment submitted to the court.

The amount of pure crude and contaminated oil discharged in Ecuador far surpasses the size of the BP disaster, Donziger said.

The lawsuit was originally filed in 1993 in U.S. federal court, but it was moved to Ecuador in 2002 on a motion from Chevron. To induce dismissal of the case, Chevron at the time submitted 14 sworn affidavits praising the fairness of Ecuador's courts.