Chevron – Global Environmental Standards Report (2008)
Outcome: 7%
WHEREAS
The Chevron Business and Ethics Code places the highest priority on the safety of its staff, community members and the environment where it operates. Corporate Policy 530 “commits Chevron to comply with the spirit and letter of all environmental, health and safety laws and regulations, regardless of the degree of enforcement.”
Our company operates in 180 countries, including Africa, Asia and Latin America nations where environmental regimes may be less protective of human health and the environment than in North American and European countries where Chevron operates.
CEO David O’Reilly has recognized the importance of our company’s relationships with oil producing nations in Africa and Latin America. (International Petroleum Finance, 03/09/05, “Chevron Chief Believes the Surplus is Over.”)
Notwithstanding Chevron’s efforts to comply with environmental laws and regulations in developing countries, our company has repeatedly been cited for practices that allegedly have caused environmental damage and harmed the health and welfare of local communities.
- Chevron is accused of polluting land and water resources in its ongoing operations in the Niger Delta. According to observers, these persistent environmental problems have fueled civil unrest, protests against our company and a related lawsuit alleging Chevron’s complicity in security forces’ killing of two protestors. (Nigeria Ten Years On: Injustice and Violence Haunt the Oil Delta, Amnesty International,11/03/05)
- Kazakhstan authorities have imposed a $609 million fine on the Chevron-led consortium developing the Tengiz oil field, for alleged environmental violations.
- In 2002, the Angolan government fined Chevron $2 million for pipeline oil spills that polluted beaches and damaged fishing in the Cabinda region.
- Chevron is on trial in Ecuador for widespread contamination of Amazonian land and water resources in the 1970s. (“Rain Forest Jekyll and Hyde,” The New York Times, 10/20/05)
- Unocal’s pipeline operations in Burma contributed to the deforestation of the last primary tropical rainforest on mainland Asia, a recognized ‘biodiversity hot spot.’ (“Unocal-Total Oil Pipeline in Burma Threatens Indigenous People, Animals,” Environmental News Network, 4/27/02)
Chevron’s total Environmental, Health and Safety Fines and Settlements has increased from 278 in 2002 to 699 in 2006, according to the company’s latest Corporate Responsibility Report.
Chevron’s three strategic priorities for environmental performance are: “Defining world-class standards, measuring and communicating performance and demonstrating continual performance improvement,” toward the goal of being “recognized and admired everywhere for having a record of environmental excellence.”
RESOLVED
The shareholders request that the Board prepare a report by November 2008, prepared at reasonable cost and omitting proprietary information, on the policies and procedures that guide Chevron’s assessment of host country laws and regulations with respect to their adequacy to protect human health, the environment and our company’s reputation.
SUPPORTING STATEMENT
We believe that Chevron’s record to date demonstrates a gap between its international environmental aspirations and its performance, which would be narrowed by a commitment to apply the highest environmental standards wherever the company operates. The requested report would play a role in illuminating and addressing the factors accounting for this gap.