UPDATE: Chevron attacks Cabrera's Voodoo Economics.
Richard Cabrera is a supposed geologist and environmental expert based in Ecuador, and who's large damage estimates have played a major role in the case of Ecuador v. Chevron. His first estimate of Chevron's alledged environmental damage was $16 billion, but he's increased that to $27 billion to take into account Ecuadorians who may have been striken with cancer.
And here's the problem. No one knows where he got the new damage estimate from! What was the multiplier? Why? But I have another really basic question: who is this guy? I can't find anything in the way of a resume or a website listing from whatever university Prof Cabrera represents. In the 21st Century, how the hell can someone claim to be "a World-class expert" if no one can find them online around the World?
A search for "Richard Cabrera, geologist "yields nothing not connected with the Chevron case yet carrying his name. If the Chevron case isn't his first rodeo, then how can we be sure? Just because a court appointed him in Ecuador? He's supposed to be a World-known expert.
Cabrera's resume is something that must be investigated considering the gravity of the case he's involved in.
Showing posts with label energy politics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label energy politics. Show all posts
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Thursday, November 06, 2008
Bowoto v. Chevron - Chevron Did Not Violate Human Rights According To Article
This article below gives a balanced view of what happened in Nigeria between Larry Bowoto and Chevron and why the case is important.
LOS ANGELES, Oct. 27 -- Chevron Corp. is at the center of a legal case before federal court in San Francisco that will ask jurors to decide whether the firm sanctioned human rights abuses that resulted in the deaths and injuries of protesters at its Nigerian facilities, or whether the company was simply protecting its employees from belligerent kidnappers.
The lawsuit—identified as Bowoto vs. Chevron, No. C99-2506SI (N.D. Calif.)—alleges that Chevron, in conjunction with the Nigerian military, engaged in torture, assaults, and the killing of two protesters over Chevron's environmental record and its failure to hire locals in the delta region near its oil drilling operations.
Both sides in the current case recognize that the impending courtroom battle, described by one observer as "epic," has legal implications that reach far beyond a single incident by one corporation operating in Nigeria.
"This case could have serious ramifications for workers in developing parts of the world," said Charles A. James, Chevron vice-president and general counsel.
"If plaintiffs had their way, a company could not report hostage-taking to law enforcement authorities without facing the threat of a lawsuit in the US," James said.
Dan Stormer of Hadsell, Stormer, Keeny, Richardson & Renick in Pasadena, Calif., is representing the plaintiffs, a group of Nigerians who were injured during protests on a Chevron offshore oil platform in 1998.
Stormer said his firm is trying to hold a corporation liable for their bad actions in another country, even if it is committed by their surrogates, a wholly owned subsidiary, or by the Nigerian government.
According to Chevron, the hostage-taking incident occurred 10 years ago on oil facilities operated off the Nigerian coast by Chevron Corp. subsidiary Chevron Nigeria Ltd. (CNL). More than 100 CNL workers and contractors were held for ransom and threatened with acts of violence.
Chevron said the incident began when plaintiff Larry Bowoto and other members of the Concerned Ilaje Citizens, an unsanctioned Nigerian community group, threatened CNL with violence and sea piracy if the company did not pay them money and give them jobs.
Weeks later, according to Chevron, they followed through on their threats by seizing the oil platform, an adjacent barge, and a tug boat on May 25, 1998, holding CNL employees and contractors hostage and demanding money and other considerations. CNL attempted to negotiate a resolution without success...MORE
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