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Indybay Feature

US State Department Gets It Wrong On Chevron's Operations in the Philippines

by Aileen Suzara (aileen [at] facessolidarity.org)
The recent nomination of Chevron Philippines to the US State Department's Award for Corporate Excellence (ACE) draws opposition from environmental groups, who say this nomination ignores Chevron's negative impacts on the public health and environment of communities in the Philippines and around the world.
(San Francisco, CA) – Chevron Corporation’s recent nomination to the State Department’s annual Award for Corporate Excellence (ACE) for its Philippine-based operations was met with opposition from US and Philippine-based environmentalists. In response to the nomination, FACES sent a letter to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urging the State Department to rescind the nomination.

“Communities are suffering from Chevron’s toxic emissions, catastrophic spills, leakages, and the risk of fires and explosions,” said Mari Rose Taruc, FACES Chevron Campaign Coordinator. “Nomination to the ACE award ignores Chevron’s negative impacts on the health of communities in the Philippines and around the world where they operate.”

FACES open letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton highlights Chevron’s toxic operations in the Philippines. “Chevron Philippines is no corporation to be proud of, not by the US or the Philippines. A little corporate donation to a local project does not replace the many lives lost or harmed due to their toxic operations in the fenceline communities of the Manila oil depots, as well as around the world where they operate,” said the letter, signed by FACES board members.

Philippine civil society and environmental groups have campaigned for years for the relocation of the massive Chevron oil depot out of Pandacan, a residential district in Metro Manila. An estimated 83,000 residents are directly impacted by the depot. Accidental spills, leakages and fires have overwhelmed the community over the years. A study conducted by Global Community Monitor in 2002 detected high levels of benzene, a known carcinogen and component of gasoline, in the air around Pandacan.

Yet despite opposition from the community, public health concerns, numerous ordinances, and a 2007 Supreme Court decision that ordered Chevron to close down and relocate the depot for the “protection of the residents of Manila from catastrophic devastation,” Chevron has continued to stall out this order.

“We are asking for relocation of the depot to an area with a proper buffer zone, away from the nearest communities. This is a holocaust waiting to happen.” said leaders of Advocates for Environmental and Social Justice. AESJ is among the Manila-based groups currently leading a campaign to oust the depot.

For more information on Chevron’s impacts in the Philippines and worldwide, download the True Cost of Chevron Alternate Report: www.truecostofchevron.com and visit www.facessolidarity.org.

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