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hatrack

(59,579 posts)
Wed Jun 17, 2020, 09:49 AM Jun 2020

"Black Lives Matter", Sez Chevron; Then There's Chevron In Ecuador, Nigeria, Black Neighborhoods

EDIT




What does it mean for an oil company to promote itself as a friend of Black Lives Matter? Or, for that matter, a friend of climate activists? (Yeah, BP really did that.) When it comes to issues like racism and climate change, oil company execs appear to be dealing with cognitive dissonance. The problem is that their promises often fail to account for the full extent of the damage that fossil fuel operations wreak on black communities and the world at large.

That dissonance was highlighted last week when Chevron made an oily splash on Twitter by stating that “racism has no place in America.” The tweet linked to statements from company leaders committing to a more diverse workplace, something that civil rights leaders have been asking the oil and gas industry to do. Black employees are underrepresented in the industry — in 2019, they represented 7 percent of fossil fuel workers, compared to 12 percent of the national workforce — and those it does employ earn, on average, 23 percent less than white workers in comparable roles.

Journalists and writers on Twitter were quick to point out how fossil-fuel pollution kills black people. Others recalled how Chevron paid soldiers and police to shoot Nigerian protesters on Chevron’s oil platform in 1998, and also spilled 18 billion gallons of toxic wastewater in Ecuador, poisoning local residents. Chevron’s biggest refineries in the U.S. sit next to towns that are disproportionately black: Richmond, California, and Pascagoula, Mississippi. Black Americans are three times more likely to die from exposure to air pollution than the overall population, and 75 percent more likely to live near industrial facilities.

It’s not the first time an oil company has tried to link itself with activists pushing for a more livable future. In November, BP’s CFO said there was an “80 percent overlap” between the goals of BP and Extinction Rebellion, the protest group known for staging “die-ins” about climate change. And this week, Drilled News reported that BP, in a leaked brand document, said it wants to become more authentic and passionate … like Greta Thunberg, the famous 17-year-old Swedish climate activist. Though companies like Shell and BP have declared new climate goals, claiming that their carbon emissions will be “net-zero” in 30 years, oil companies’ plans tend to omit one crucial thing: all the emissions from the product they’re selling. As Looney, the CEO of BP, said in a recently leaked video, “We’re probably going to be in oil and gas for decades to come, because how else is that $8 billion dividend going to get serviced?”

EDIT

https://grist.org/justice/wait-chevron-said-black-lives-matter/
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"Black Lives Matter", Sez Chevron; Then There's Chevron In Ecuador, Nigeria, Black Neighborhoods (Original Post) hatrack Jun 2020 OP
Chevron soothsayer Jun 2020 #1

soothsayer

(38,601 posts)
1. Chevron
Wed Jun 17, 2020, 10:12 AM
Jun 2020

?s=21

The ultimate expression of this systemic racism towards the people of Ecuador is the fact that @Chevron – even after admitting its environmental crimes in the Amazon – continues to ignore the Ecuadorian court ruling against the company. https://buff.ly/3eaA8ML #EyeOnTheAmazon
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