|
18 june 2001
exxonmobil (esso) international day of
action: 11th of july
WHY: In April, US President Bush crushed
worldwide hopes for reducing global warming
by rejecting the Kyoto climate change treaty.
Coming from the country that produces 25% of
the world's carbon dioxide emissions but only
houses 4% of the population, the US position
has outraged the international community.
Time is running out. There is so much to
be done. Enter the International Day of
Action against ExxonMobil. Pressure Point, a
Seattle USA NGO, and Friends of the Earth
(Australia) are coordinating a Call to Action
against Bush's biggest supporter and the
worst of the "Greenhouse Gangsters"
ExxonMobil. The actions/ protests are
scheduled for the 11th of July. The protests
are in support of the call for an
international boycott of all US oil
companies, and will take place in the lead up
to the mid-July climate negotiations in
Germany.
Let us know if you're doing an action so
we can put you in press releases and on the
website (info@pressurepoint.org or
oilactions@foe.org.au ).
Targeting ExxonMobil, the biggest US
corporation and its highest profile oil
company, will spearhead the boycott campaign
and send a message to Bush and all oil
companies that the US has to take climate
justice seriously NOW. ExxonMobil continues
to fund greenhouse skeptics, has spent
millions on greenwash advertisements, was one
of the top contributors to Bush's election,
has been active in lobbying the US government
to reject the Kyoto Protocol, and invests
virtually nothing in renewable energy. It is
also one of the major proponents behind
drilling in the Arctic Refuge in Alaska. It
also has a terrible human rights and
environmental record and is an unabashed
supporter of free trade. Organisers in at
least 15 countries are mobilizing around
targeting ExxonMobil. The International Day
of Action (IDA) is part of a major global
campaign on climate and fossil fuels, and is
a campaign that will send a message to Bush,
the oil industry's number one supporter. Get
involved in our direct action campaign
against ExxonMobil. Join the global effort to
let ExxonMobil and George W Bush know it's
not up to them to determine our planet's
future, and that they have to make the shift
from exploration to renewable energy NOW.
Join the campaign, and fight to reclaim our
future! ENDORSED BY: Friends of the Earth
(Australia), Greenpeace (Australia), The
Wilderness Society, Australian Conservation
Foundation, OzGreen, Environment Victoria,
Environment Centre of the Northern Territory,
The Greens
Our demands for ExxonMobil
-
Support the Kyoto Protocol, which would
reduce CO2 emission levels;
-
Stop pushing for drilling in the Arctic
Refuge and on other public lands;
-
Agree to an investigation by an
international human rights tribunal and
abide by it's findings;
-
Cease all new exploration and invest
that money in renewable resources
ExxonMobil is the 8th largest economy in the
world*. Because of its sheer size, it has an
inordinate say over climate change, human
rights and the environment. It is using its
economic power to try to insure that the new
world order is ruled by corporations.
*Multinational Monitor, June 1999
EXXONMOBIL'S CORPORATE RECORD: ENVIRONMENT:
ExxonMobil Chairman LeeRaymond is on record
advocating that developing countries should
lower environmental standards in order to
promote economic growth. A recent report on
the Baytown refinery in Houston has revealed
persistent accidental releases and failure to
report problems and emissions. Twelve years
after the infamous Exxon Valdez disaster,
contamination continues. ExxonMobil has been
fined millions for Clean Air Act violations
and the company openly funds anti-environment
think tanks.
ARCTIC REFUGE: ExxonMobil wants Congress
to okay drilling on the coastal plain of the
Arctic Refuge. Drilling would seriously
impact the environment and is opposed by the
Gwich'in people, who rely on the Caribou
herds that breed there. If SUV fuel
efficiency standards were raised by only 3
miles per gallon, it would more than equal
all the oil in this area.
CLIMATE CHANGE: ExxonMobil denies any
responsibility for climate change, openly
funds climate skeptics, has spent millions to
discredit the Kyoto climate change Protocol
and has lobbied the US government to drop it.
While some oil companies have taken tentative
steps to invest in clean energy sources,
ExxonMobil invests virtually nothing in
renewable energy.
HUMAN RIGHTS: In Aceh province, Indonesia,
human rights groups report that ExxonMobil
provided earth-moving equipment to dig mass
graves, equipped soldiers involved in
atrocities and allowed company facilities to
be used for interrogation and torture. It has
also been heavily criticized for abuses in
Nigeria, Ecuador and Columbia, and for
building refineries in communities of
color.
GOVERNMENT: ExxonMobil helped draft Bush's
"voluntary" emissions reporting system for
Texas. It gave $1.2m to the 2000 Bush
campaign and actively lobbies to block
government action on climate change. The Bush
energy policy reads as if written by
ExxonMobil: it pulled out of the Kyoto
climate change treaty, plans to build a new
power plant every week for the next 20 years
and intends to drill next in the Arctic
Refuge and on other public lands.
GLOBALIZATION: ExxonMobil openly advocates
"free trade," including the Free Trade Area
of the Americas. Free trade agreements have
meant a growing gap between rich and poor,
fewer environmental and human rights controls
and a global mechanism for pushing fossil
fuels onto the developing world. This company
is underwriting the Chad Cameroon pipeline
project, which has been heavily criticized
for its human rights and environmental
damage.
More info:
http://www.globalwarming.isbad.net or
http://www.pressurepoint.org or http://
www.foe.org.au
http://campaignexxonmobil.org/action/
Sign the Exxon Mobil Boycott call online:
www.petitiononline.com/citizens/petition.html
Mailinglist Exxon Mobil campaign:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/stopglobalwarmingnow
Friends of the Earth Melbourne
(Australia)
PO Box 222 Fitzroy 3065
312 Smith St Collingwood
Phone: (03) 9419 8700
Fax: (03) 9416 2081
(International: tel. +61 (3) 9419 8700; fax
+61 (3) 9416 2081)
www.melbourne.foe.org.au
|