Posted by jinn on 17th August 2009
Activists Demanded Chevron “Cap the Crude,” Provide Safe Jobs, And Call For Climate Justice in the Lead Up to Climate Talks in Copenhagen
Press Release from the Mobilization for Climate Justice

Community members marching in Richmond
Richmond, CA – Hundreds of Richmond community members joined climate change advocates, public health experts, local government and labor leaders today in a colorful march, protest and non-violent civil disobedience at Chevron’s Richmond refinery. After a festival outside the Richmond BART station with music, dancers and speakers, and an hour-long march that wound through the city streets, a mass die-in and nonviolent civil disobedience took place at the refinery gates. Thirteen people were arrested.
The actions outside Chevron were organized by a new coalition–The Mobilization for Climate Justice-West–whose goals are to get Chevron to “cap the crude” at its Richmond refinery and to get al l corporations, including Chevron, out of the international climate talks in Copenhagen in December. Chevron wants to process heavier crude at its Richmond refinery. Refining heavier crude will result in more air pollution, greater greenhouse gas emissions and disease.
“Chevron has the opportunity to do the right thing,” said Mayor of Richmond, Gayle McLaughlin. “They just need to agree to capping the crude at the level they currently refine. We want them to put Richmond’s residents to work modernizing and replacing the 80 year old boilers, which sadly they chose to remove from the project several months ago. ” “We want Chevron to build a cleaner and safer refinery,” said Ana Orozco of Communities for A Better Environment. ”We want the union jobs to continue to build a refinery that is cleaner and safer for our community. Our community has been put at risk for too long.”
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Tags: cap the crude, Chevron, justice in nigeria now, Mobilization for Climate Justice, Nigeria, Richmond, richmond refinery expansion
Posted in Chevron, Nigeria | No Comments »
Posted by jinn on 2nd June 2009

Proxies representing Nigeria, Ecuador, the Philippines, Burma, Iraq, Richmond and Kazakhstan return from speaking to Chevron's Shareholders - AP Photo/Paul Sakuma
JINN is a member of the diverse coalition of organizations and individuals who wrote and released The True Cost of Chevron: An Alternative Annual Report on May 26 in time for Chevron’s shareholder meeting on May 27. Several members of the coalition presented the report to shareholders, the board of directors and Chevron’s CEO David O’ Reilly inside the shareholder meeting. O’ Reilly responded by saying the report belonged in the trash can and that he was personally insulted by the statements made by the proxies who represented Chevron affected communities around the world. Read the Full Press Release from the Coalition
Our ally from the Niger Delta, human rights activist, Tunde Okorodudu was able to speak inside the shareholder meeting. He said: “David O’ Reilly showed nothing but disrespect to all those who traveled from around the world to address the shareholder meeting, Chevron has done nothing but enable the culture of violence that now permeates my region.”
A subvertisement ad campaign, designed by Underground Ads accompanied the release of the report.

"Chevron refuses to clean up its mess in Nigeria." Ads designed by Underground Ads
Below is the announcement for the report and website with full information. Read the report and spread the word! TrueCostofChevron.com
The
True Cost
of Chevron
An Alternative Annual Report
May 2009
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Amazon Watch · CorpWatch · Crude Accountability · Environmental Rights Action
EarthRights International · Filipino-American Coalition for Environmental Solidarity · Global Exchange
Justice in Nigeria Now · Mpalabanda · Rainforest Action Network · Richmond Progressive Alliance
Trustees for Alaska · US Labor Against the War · West County Toxics Coalition |
Think you know Chevron? Think again.Chevron’s 2008 annual report is a glossy celebration of the company’s most profitable year in its history. What Chevron’s annual report does not tell its shareholders is the true cost paid for those financial returns, or the global movement gaining voice and strength against Chevron’s abuses. Thus, we, the communities and our allies who bear the consequences of Chevron’s oil and natural gas production, refineries, depots, pipelines, exploration, offshore drilling rigs, coal fields, chemical plants, political control, consumer abuse, false promises, and much more, have prepared an Alternative Annual Report for Chevron.
The True Cost of Chevron: An Alternative Annual Report is a one-stop-shop for activists, policy makers, journalists, investors, analysts, and communities in struggle.It is the most comprehensive exposé of Chevron’s operations – and the communities in struggle against them – ever compiled. It includes reports from Alaska, California, Colorado, Florida, the Gulf Coast, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, Utah, Washington, D.C, and Wyoming; internationally across Angola, Burma, Canada, Chad, Cameroon, Ecuador, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Nigeria, and the Philippines.
Antonia Juhasz is the lead author and editor of the report, which includes the writings of sixteen additional authors from across the U.S. and around the world and the contributions of dozens of organizations.
The 44-page report is available to download at TrueCostofChevron.com – a visually stunning website using our ChevWrong “Inhumane Energy” ads that reveal the hypocrisy of Chevron’s human energy ad campaign. The report and the ads can be downloaded for free from the website, which also provides links to the organizations involved in the True Cost of Chevron campaign and more.

Photo LEFT: Fire burning at Chevron Pascagoula, MS refinery, photograph by Christy Pritchett ran August 17, 2007.
Courtesy of the Press-Register 2007 © All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission. |
Tags: Burma, Chevron, Chevron Shareholder meeting, Ecuador, Iraq, Kazakhstan, Nigeria, Philippines, Richmond, true cost of chevron
Posted in Chevron, David O'Reilly, Niger Delta, Nigeria, Uncategorized | No Comments »
Posted by jinn on 23rd August 2008

copyright: Ed Kashi
On August 22, JINN representative and two other guests were on Terra Verde, a radio program that airs on Berkeley’s KPFA 94.1 to talk about Chevron’s environmental record in Nigeria and to inform the public about the upcoming court case against Chevron filed by Nigerian villagers for human rights abuses committed by Chevron in 1998. Listen Here
Tags: 9th Circuit Court, Berkeley, Bowoto v. Chevron, Chevron, Cindy Cohn, kpfa, Niger Delta, Nigeria, public radio, Richmond, Terra Verde, U.S. Federal Court
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »