The people of Ecuador are rising up to refound their country as a pluri-national homeland for all. This inspiring movement, with Ecuador's indigenous peoples at its heart, is part of the revolution spreading across the Americas, laying the groundwork for a new, fairer, world. Ecuador Rising aims to bring news and analysis of events unfolding in Ecuador to english speakers.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Ecuador: Oil Cos Must Comment On New Pacts By Week's End

QUITO -(Dow Jones)- Ecuador's minister for nonrenewable natural resources, Wilson Pastor, said Tuesday that private-sector oil companies have until the end of the week to offer comments on the government's new service contracts.

Last month, Ecuador passed a new hydrocarbons law that aims to expropriate foreign-company operations unless they sign the new service contracts. The new contract models were sent to oil companies last week.

Rafael Correa's government wants to replace current production-sharing deals with service contracts under which private oil companies will be paid a production fee while the government will own 100% of the oil and gas produced.

The government will pay one tariff for operating fields and another for exploration. The fees will cover costs, amortization of investments and provide a reasonable profit, according to the government.

Pastor said he hoped to reach agreements on the new contracts in the next two weeks with few modifications, other than the fees, which will be fixed with each company separately. Comments on the new contracts must be delivered in writing. He also said the fees paid to major companies should be agreed by October and fees paid to smaller ones in December.

The minister is due to renegotiate 33 contracts, grouped into 13 negotiation processes because some companies have more than one contract.

Pastor said that "in general," the contract clauses are the same as international models, except for some additions by the Ecuadorian government. One such stipulation is that any conflicts between the state and private oil companies will be handled by the United Nations Commission of International Trade Law.

Italy's Eni SpA, Spain's Repsol YPF SA, Brazil's state-run Petroleo Brasileiro SA and China's Andes Petroleum Co. and PetroOriental are the major oil companies operating in Ecuador.

The first companies to come to the table to negotiate the fees will be Repsol YPF and the local unit of Chile's Enap. The second group to negotiate will be Andes Petroleum and Petrooriental S.A, and a third group will include Petrobras and Eni.

Pastor said that under the new service contracts, the government expects to take between 85% and 90% of oil revenues against the 65% that currently it receives.

If companies don't want to change to the new contracts, a price will be determined for the liquidation of their current contracts, paving the way for them to leave the country.

Chevron Submits "Wild" Distortions of Ecuador Video to Federal Court; Conceals Evidence of Own Misconduct

Amazon Defense Coalition

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 2010-08-16

Karen Hinton at 703-798-3109 or karen@hintoncommunications.com
Mitch Anderson at 415-342-4783 or mitch@amazonwatch.org

Chevron Submits "Wild" Distortions of Ecuador Video to Federal Court; Conceals Evidence of Own Misconduct

Violates Federal Court Order By Sending Filings to Media

In an explosive legal filing, lawyers for Ecuador's Amazonian communities suing Chevron for environmental damage have submitted evidence that the oil giant is attempting to mislead a U.S. Federal Court with "wild, superficial allegations" based on "snippets" of private video outtakes from Joe Berlinger's award-winning documentary film CRUDE.

Representatives of the 30,000 rainforest residents, who have suffered from nearly 50 years of living in and around oil contamination, responded in their own legal filing to Chevron's misleading use of the video clips by claiming Chevron is hiding "massive evidence of its own misconduct" contained in the footage.


CRUDE
chronicles part of the 17-year legal battle between the Ecuadorian Amazonian communities and Chevron, which the residents accuse of creating the worst oil-related disaster on Earth.

Chevron had pressed to have U.S. federal judge Lewis Kaplan decide its motion before the plaintiffs could review the entire 500 or hours of film clips, as Chevron refused to share them after receiving them from Berlinger under court order. Review of even a small sample of clips by lawyers for the communities shows clearly that Chevron had attempted to mislead the Court and had violated a court order by turning over excerpts from the outtakes to the media before even serving opposing counsel.


According to the motion filed by the communities:


"Now it is clear why Chevron hid the full outtakes from the Court and from Plaintiffs, and pressed to have this motion decided before Plaintiffs could even review the evidence. Chevron and its counsel have rushed to mislead the Court and the public with a McMotion based on sound-bites and highly-edited, de-contextualized snippets constituting less than 0.1% of the outtakes. It did so while concealing massive evidence in the outtakes of its own misconduct. And it did so in plain violation of a Second Circuit order."


The motion also pointed out that Chevron provided its filing to a blogger previously paid by Chevron, Carter Wood, and sent out a press release and Tweet around two hours before it served opposing counsel. In direct violation of the court order, Chevron then produced transcripts of the outtakes directly to the San Francisco Chronicle, according to a report in that newspaper.


The legal brief for the communities showed Chevron's bad faith and selective editing of the film clips, including Chevron's false assertion that consultants for the Amazon communities admitted they have no evidence of groundwater contamination, when in fact those consultants said repeatedly that the groundwater is contaminated.


"Chevron's failure to accurately describe the evidence is part of a larger scheme by the Chevron lawyers to hide the company's misconduct in Ecuador," said Jonathan Abady, an American attorney for the Amazonian communities.


"Chevron is engaged in a desperate attempt to distract attention from the environmental disaster and public health crisis it caused in Ecuador," he added.


Chevron also came under fire from Berlinger for violating a federal court order prohibiting use of the materials for press or public relations purposes, noting Chevron's distribution of the material on Twitter and to bloggers hours before it was served on opposing lawyers.


Chevron's lawyers also suggested that an "enterprising" law student copy the outtakes from the court and post them on the Internet, in an apparent violation of the order, according to a blogger.


In his own court filing, Berlinger accused Chevron of making "false and misleading" statements about the film outtakes. He told Fortune magazine that he was "dismayed at the level of mischaracterizations in Chevron's Memorandum brief... The footage citations are being taken out of context and not being presented to the court in its entirety, creating numerous false impressions, precisely what we feared when we were first issued the original subpoena."

Ecuador says to take at least 85 pct oil revenues

* Ecuador seeks to increase state revenue from oil sector

* New petroleum contract negotiations to start this month

By Santiago Silva

QUITO, Aug 17 (Reuters) - Ecuador's government will take at least 85 percent of revenue under a new round of oil contracts to be negotiated with private petroleum companies, Ecuador's minister for oil policy Wilson Pastor said on Tuesday.

The state currently receives an average 65 percent of the revenues generated by private firms operating in the Andean country.

"We are going to raise the participation (of the state) to at least 85 percent," Pastor, who holds the rotating presidency of OPEC this year, told reporters.

Profit margins for investment in new oil fields will be 18 percent to 22 percent under the new pacts while profitability will be 15 percent to 18 percent for investments in producing fields, Pastor said.

Last week, he turned over new model contracts to petroleum companies and said he plans to start negotiating the new pacts on Aug. 23.

Firms operating in Ecuador include Spain's Repsol , Brazil's Petrobras and Italy's Eni.

Ecuador has said it wanted to maintain oil production by private companies at around 200,000 barrels per day following the signing of the service contracts.

The government wants state oil production to reach 384,000 barrels per day (bpd) by 2013 from around 264,000 bpd currently.

Companies that do not sign the new deals will be paid for their assets in Ecuador and leave the country, President Rafael Correa has said.

His government has already taken over the local assets of U.S. oil company Occidental Petroleum and France's Perenco. Analysts say it has done so without paying a high political cost.

Correa's main regional allies, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Bolivia's Evo Morales, also have introduced reforms and nationalized the assets of foreign investors in a bid to increase state revenue from energy and mining companies.

Ecuador is latest South American country to consider marriage equality; Bolivia may follow

17 Aug 2010


A bill to allow civil marriage will be introduced in Ecuador’s National Assembly on Thursday, according to the Chilean newspaper El Mercurio.

In 2008, Ecuador adopted a new constitution that prohibits discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

Bolivia has a similar provision in its new constitution called “The Law Against Racism and All Types of Discrimination.” The LGBT rights group Equidad participated in a presentation and analysis of the Bolivian provision chaired by a member of the National Assembly. Recommendations will be made this week, and they’ll presumably include a marriage equality law.

This summer, South America has been a hotbed of equality legislation. Marriage equality passed in Argentina. An upgrade from civil unions in Uruguay, which have been legal for several years, is being debated. Civil union bills also have been introduced in Chile and Peru.

Chilean Senator Fulvio Rossi, who introduced the bill there, doesn’t expect it to pass. El Mercurio doesn’t predict what the chances are for passage of the bill in Ecuador.

New Ecuador Contracts To Take 25% Of Oil Company Profits

August 12, 2010

QUITO (Dow Jones)--New model service contracts delivered to private oil companies in Ecuador say the state is to take a "sovereignty" payment to equal 25% of their net profits.

A copy of the new contract was seen by Dow Jones late Thursday. Last month Ecuador passed a new hydrocarbons law which aims to expropriate foreign-company operations unless they sign the new service contracts, which increase state control of the industry.

Under the new contracts, private oil companies will be paid a production fee, while the government will own 100% of the oil and gas produced.

The contract says that after deducting the 25%, the state will "cover" operational and production costs via two kinds of tariff. No tariff rates are given but the first tariff is called a "production" tariff, and the second an "incremental production" tariff. The first tariff will cover the actual cost of production, while the second will cover the so-called new costs of production after the contract is signed.

In a telephone interview, Ecuador's minister for Nonrenewable Natural Resources, Wilson Pastor, said the fees, the time periods of the contracts and the investments by private oil companies will be discussed during negotiations with private oil and gas companies, which are to be held shortly.

Earlier this month Pastor said the new contract negotiations with private oil companies will have two priorities: setting the flat rate fee the state will pay to private companies for oil extraction, and examining companies' investment plans. Pastor said this did not mean establishing minimum investment levels, but rather examining projected investment projects to see if they suited "state interests."

The new contract allows for the possibility of paying the fee in dollars or in oil, "if it is convenient to the interests of the state."

The new law, passed July 27, set a deadline of 120 days from that date for major operators to make the changeover to the new service contracts. Smaller petroleum companies have 180 days.

The new contract also states that any eventual conflicts between the state and private oil companies will be handled by the United Nations Commission of International Trade Law.


Chevron Abused Federal Court With "False and Misleading" Use of Ecuador Footage, Says Filmmaker

Amazon Defense Coalition

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 2010-08-11

Karen Hinton at 703-798-3109 or karen@hintoncommunications.com
Mitch Anderson at 415-342-4783 or mitch@amazonwatch.org

Chevron Abused Federal Court With "False and Misleading" Use of Ecuador Footage, Says Filmmaker

Director Berlinger Provides Evidence That Chevron Violated Court Order

New York, NY – Chevron is facing blistering criticism from Joe Berlinger, the award-winning filmmaker of the documentary CRUDE, for violating a court order and making "false and misleading" statements about film outtakes shot by Mr. Berlinger, according to legal papers filed by Berlinger's lawyers before a New York federal judge.

Berlinger had turned over hundreds of hours of outtakes from
CRUDE to Chevron in accordance with a July 15 court order from the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, but only after the company promised not to use the film footage for its public relations campaigns. CRUDE chronicles the legal struggle by 30,000 Ecuadorian rainforest residents over Chevron's illegal dumping of more than 18 billion gallons of toxic "produced water" directly into the Amazon.

Chevron's promise was memorialized in the Second Circuit's order that the "[m]aterial produced under this order shall be used by the petitioners solely for litigation, arbitration, or submission to official bodies, either local or international."


Despite the Second Circuit's order prohibiting use of the materials for press or public relations purposes, Chevron immediately distributed the material on Twitter and provided it to bloggers hours before it was even served to opposing lawyers.


According to Berlinger's legal filing, Chevron's violations of the court order include:

  • On August 3 at 7:47 p.m. – more than two hours before Chevron served its motion on Berlinger's lawyers – a detailed article on the film outtakes was posted on the blog of the National Association of Manufacturers.
  • Nineteen minutes later and also well before the papers were served, Chevron posted "CRUDE Footage Reveals Lies Behind Trial Lawyers' Suit Against Chevron" to its Twitter.com page, and linked to the above-referenced article.
  • On August 5 the San Francisco Chronicle posted an article entitled "Chevron: Outtakes prove collusion with expert," in which the author states that he was given the outtakes by Chevron.

Beyond Chevron's violations of the Court order, Berlinger told Fortune magazine that the company was mischaracterizing what was in the outtakes for litigation purposes.

"I am dismayed at the level of mischaracterizations in Chevron's Memorandum brief," Berlinger said in an interview with the magazine. "The footage citations are being taken out of context and not being presented to the court in its entirety, creating numerous false impressions, precisely what we feared when we were first issued the original subpoena."


Ilann Maazel, who represents the Ecuadorian residents suing Chevron, called the company's conduct "a cynical and desperate, last-minute legal strategy."


"Chevron's court filing is highly misleading, at best," he said. "It appears to be a motion in service of a press release. Why else would Chevron share its motion with the international press before even informing Mr. Berlinger or the plaintiffs?"


"Chevron is attempting anything it can to distract attention from its huge potential liability in Ecuador," said Maazel. "The company has been reduced to clever editing and unsupported, nefarious allegations to mask overwhelming evidence of its own misconduct."


More than 64,000 chemical sampling results – more than 80% of which were provided by the company's own scientists – and a 200,000 page trial record has produced a mountain of evidence showing the extent of the contamination.

Ecuador proposes to create cross-border macroregion with Peru

Panoramic view of the city of Cajamarca, located in the northern highlands of Peru. Photo: ANDINA / Eduard Lozano.
Panoramic view of the city of Cajamarca, located in the northern highlands of Peru. Photo: ANDINA / Eduard Lozano.
1 of 2
Cajamarca, Aug. 11 (ANDINA). The Regional director of Ecuador Tourism Ministry’s Frontera Sur, Fabián Altamirano Arias, suggested Cajamarca authorities create a tourism cross-border macroregion to promote attractions along cities located in Peru-Ecuador border area.

The proposal was made at a meeting with Regional Director of Foreign Trade and Tourism (Dircetur) Julio Palacios, officials of Cajamarca’s Regional Government and the Chamber of Commerce.

“The border integration process has worked successfully in the last years, but it is necessary to create a cross-border macroregion on tourism in order to strengthen this process, and Cajamarca is an important region for us,” Altamirano said.

Such proposal is feasible, he said, because tourism is a uniting and strengthening sector, and it would be used to reinforce tourism training processes and promotion of northern Peru and Southern Ecuador, ie. as an only one tourist destination.

In that sense, he summoned the regional directors of Peru to meet with their Ecuadorian counterparts on September 3 at the city of Loja to design a project profile and submit it to the presidents of both countries.

Ecuador to analyze 'Raul Reyes' files

10 August 2010, ColombiaReports.com

miguel carvajal

The Ecuadorean government on Tuesday handed over files found on the computer fo FARC leader "Raul Reyes" to the country's Prosecutor General's Office for analysis.

Ecuadorean Minister for Security and the Interior Miguel Carvajal said that Colombia had provided two "mirror copies" of the hard disks, which were recovered in the Colombian army 2008 raid of a FARC camp on Ecuadorean soil, in which Reyes was killed.

Carvajal said that the Ecuadorean executive and the prosecutor general will conduct parallel investigations into the contents of the discs, and "analyze and pay close attention to the aspects regarding national security."

Colombia has claimed that the discs' contents prove links between the administration of Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa and the FARC.

"We have had two years of media campaigns against [Ecuador], trying to link our government with the FARC, which has been completely distorted. There are many criticisms and it is possible that there is a lot of proof of manipulation of the information," said Carvajal.

The minister added that following the media campaign, it is Ecuador's "right" to view the evidence that Colombia claims backs up its allegations.

Ecuadorean Defense Minister Javier Ponce said he was confident that Bogota's accusations would be thrown out with the trash.

"We have absolute confidence in our acts and we believe that this material will not even remotely reveal these type of affirmations and accusations," Ponce said.

Carvajal said that the handing over of the files on Saturday by the new administration of Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos was a positive gesture. Submitting the files to Ecuador for analysis was one of Santos' first acts as president, following his inauguration Saturday.

Ecuador broke diplomatic relations with Colombia following the 2008 raid. While the two nations began to work towards repairing ties in the second half of 2009, Correa maintained that complete restoration of relations was dependent on Colombia supplying Ecuador with Reyes' files, which the administration of former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe refused to comply with.

Correa said Monday with in an interview with W Radio that Ecuador is disposed to re-establish ties with Colombia, now that the files have been handed over.


Ecuador to leave oil in ground

Saturday, August 7, 2010
By Duroyan Fertl, Green Left Weekly/ Hintadupfing Blog
Yasuni National Park. Photo: Banktrack.org

On August 3, the Ecuadorian government signed a landmark deal to prevent drilling for oil in the ecologically unique Ishpingo-Tambococha-Tiputini areas of the Yasuni National Park (Yasuni-ITT).

The agreement, signed by the government of left-wing President Rafael Correa and the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), guarantees that the estimated 900 million barrels of oil that lie beneath the pristine Amazonian region will remain untouched, as will the forest above.

In exchange, Ecuador will receive US$3.6 billion as compensation for the revenue it would otherwise have made from the oil — about half its estimated value.

The Yasuni National Park is one of the most biodiverse sites on Earth, covering 982,000 hectares in the Amazonian rainforest and Andean foothills. It contains more tree species in one hectare than there are in the whole of the US and Canada combined.

It shelters at least 28 highly endangered vertebrates including jaguars, the white-bellied spider monkey, the giant otter and the Amazonian manatee, and hundreds of species found nowhere else on Earth.

Yasuni is also the ancestral territory of the Huaorani people, as well as two other indigenous tribes who live in voluntary isolation, the Tagaeri and the Taromenane.

Over past decades, large parts of Ecuador’s Amazonian region have been permanently damaged by oil drilling. Indigenous communities have suffered both the brunt of this ecological destruction and violent oppression by oil companies.

A major court case brought by 30,000 residents of the Ecuadorian Amazon against Chevron Texaco for causing an “Amazonian Chernobyl” is nearing its verdict, despite 20 years of threats and manoeuvres by the oil company.

Correa launched the Yasuni-ITT initiative in 2007 seeking international financial contributions equivalent to half the revenue the oil would have brought the country in exchange for leaving the reserve untouched.

Through the project, Correa aimed to secure funds for key social programs and infrastructure in Ecuador, while protecting the environment and contributing to the battle against climate change.

Negotiations for the project almost collapsed, however. International support was slow to appear, and Ecuador went though three different foreign ministers and three negotiating teams. Correa criticised many of them for not negotiating forcefully enough.

At the same time, mining continued in parts of the park, and indigenous and environmental protestors clashed with the government, blockading roads and organising large protests against mining.

Ecuador’s civil society organisations, and the Huaorani people, helped to keep the project alive by building support for it nationally and internationally.

Initial donor countries include Germany, Spain, France, Sweden, and Switzerland, who have committed an estimated $1.5 billion.

The funds, when received, will be placed in a trust fund administered by the UNDP, and will be used to protect 4.8 million hectares in Ecuador's other national parks, to develop renewable energy sources and to build schools and hospitals for indigenous communities.

“We are seeking nothing less than a new paradigm for development. This is what the majority of people in Ecuador want”, said Daniel Ortega, a spokesperson for the environment and climate change ministry.

”Yasuni will remain protected through generations.”

The newly ratified deal also prevents the release of around 410 million tonnes of carbon dioxide from burning the oil, and may set a radical precedent for future climate change negotiations. Guatemala and Nigeria have already approached Ecuador for help design similar programmes.

Praise for the project has been tempered, however, by concern from environmental and indigenous groups that the Yasuni deal may provide cover for the Ecuadorian government to open up other areas of the Amazon to exploitation.

“We hope that the success of the Yasuni proposal doesn't mean a defeat for the forests and people of the southern rainforests”, German Freire, president of the Achuar indigenous people told the non-profit Amazon Watch.

“We don't want Correa to offset his lost income from leaving the ITT oil in the ground by opening up other areas of equally pristine indigenous lands.”

The Ecuadorian government itself stressed that the agreement will not become a reality until the promised contributions from governments are actually paid.

The criticism from indigenous and environmental groups notwithstanding, a number of gains have been made under Correa’s government.

In July, UNESCO removed Ecuador’s Galapagos Islands from its World Heritage in Danger list, in response to Ecuador’s efforts to reduce the impact of tourism, fishing and non-native species.

Ecuador’s new constitution — drafted by a popular Citizens’ Assembly in 2007 and adopted in 2008 — guarantees the right to clean water, and grants enforceable legal rights to the environment.

Widespread distrust of Correa’s mining and water policies remains among Ecuador’s powerful indigenous and environmental movements, however. Both sides have traded insults in recent months.

The Yasuni agreement also comes a week after Ecuador enacted a law increasing state control over the oil sector. Previously mining companies and the government shared the costs and profits of production, with companies paying additional tax on superprofits.

Under the new law, Ecuador will own 100% of the oil, with 25% of gross oil income going directly to the state. Companies will receive a flat “fee” for the “service” they provide by extracting the resource.

The new arrangement also means that Ecuador — rather than oil companies — will be the main beneficiary of fluctuations in the international oil price.

“The new payment plan will likely restrict private windfalls when world oil prices quickly rise”, Alexis Mera, legal secretary to the president's office, told television station Uno.

“With the new law, we pay them a rate for oil produced”, Mera said. "They won't take away a single drop of oil."

Correa also threatened that companies who refuse to renegotiate their mining contracts in line with the new law will face nationalisation. Companies now have 120 days to renegotiate their contracts or they will be taken over by the state oil company, Petroecuador.

Ecuador is the fifth-largest crude producer in the Americas, producing an estimated 480,000 barrels per day, which accounts for around 60% of the country’s export revenue and is the financial backbone of Correa’s social programs.

Thursday, August 05, 2010

Ecuador Agrees to Keep Amazon Eco-Treasure Free of Oil Drilling

QUITO, Ecuador, August 4, 2010 (ENS) - The government of Ecuador and the United Nations Development Programme have agreed to establish a trust fund to protect an ecologically unique site in the Ecuadorian Amazon from oil development.

The first of its kind in the world, the deal signed Tuesday in Quito leaves an estimated 846 million barrels of crude oil in the ground beneath Yasuni National Park in exchange for payments to the government of Ecuador in compensation for foregone revenue.

The accord will prevent the discharge into the atmosphere of more than 400 million tons of carbon dioxide that would have resulted from burning the oil that would have been extracted from the Ishpingo-Tambococha-Tiputini, or ITT, fields in eastern Ecuador.

At the Yasuni-ITT Trust Fund signing ceremony, from left: UNDP Associate Administrator Rebeca Grynspan, Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino, Vice President Lenin Moreno, and Maria Fernanda Espinosa from the Ministry of Cultural and Natural Heritage (Photo courtesy Government of Ecuador)

This precedent of avoided CO2 emissions could become a precedent for future climate negotiations.

Rebecca Grynspan, UNDP associate administrator and a signatory to the agreement, said, "We are witnessing the inauguration of new instruments of cooperation which will act as a basis for supporting other national and international efforts directed towards the search for economies that are in harmony with society, nature and the planet."

In 2007, Ecuador's President Rafael Correa launched the Yasuni-ITT initiative, seeking international financial contributions equaling about half of the country's forgone revenues if the government left Yasuni's oil reserve untouched.

The agreement seeks to strike a balance between protecting the park and its indigenous inhabitants, while generating revenue for Ecuador, a country dependent on oil for 60 percent of its exports.

Ecuador will now seek contributions from governments to protect the ITT fields from drilling and stressed that the agreement will not become a reality until the funds are collected.

UNDP will administer the trust fund. Initial donor countries include Germany, Spain, France, Sweden, and Switzerland. They have collectively committed an estimated US$1.5 billion of the US$3.6 billon that the Ecuadorian government seeks to replace the estimated $7 billion that oil exploitation would have brought.

Some of Ecuador's indigenous groups are concerned by the Correa administration's announcement this week that it will open up areas of Ecuador's roadless, pristine southeastern Amazon region, as well as re-offering older oil blocks that were unsuccessful due to indigenous resistance.

San Rafael Falls on the Quijos River in Yasuni National Park (Photo by Lou Gold)

"We hope that the success of the Yasuni proposal doesn't mean a defeat for the forests and people of the southern rainforests," said German Freire, president of the Achuar indigenous people who have land title to almost two million acres of intact rainforest, all of which would be opened to new drilling. "We don't want Correa to offset his lost income from leaving the ITT oil in the ground by opening up other areas of equally pristine indigenous lands."

Yasuni National Park covers 982,000 hectares (2.5 million acres) at the intersection of the Andes Mountains and the Amazon River close to the equator and is considered one of the most biodiverse sites on Earth.

As a result of its unique location, Yasuni contains the greatest variety of tree and insect species anywhere on the planet. In just 2.5 acres, there are as many tree species as in all of the United States and Canada combined.

Yasuni National Park is the most diverse area in all of South America and shatters world records for a wide array of plant and animal groups, from amphibians to trees to insects, according to a team of Ecuadorian and U.S. scientists in a January 2010 study.

"Yasuni is at the center of a small zone where South America's amphibians, birds, mammals, and vascular plants all reach maximum diversity," said Dr. Clinton Jenkins of the University of Maryland. "We dubbed this area the 'quadruple richness center.'"

Squirrel monkey in Yasuni National Park (Photo by Josh Bousel)

Yasuni contains 28 endangered vertebrates on the IUCN Red List, including threatened large primates such as the white-bellied spider monkey and Poeppig's woolly monkey; aquatic mammals such as the giant otter and Amazonian manatee; and hundreds of regional endemic species found nowhere else on Earth.

"What makes Yasuni especially important is its potential to sustain this extraordinary biodiversity in the long term," said co-author Dr. Matt Finer of Save America's Forests. "For example, the Yasuni region is predicted to maintain wet, rainforest conditions as climate change-induced drought intensifies in the eastern Amazon."

The authors conclude that proposed oil development projects represent the greatest threat to Yasuni and its biodiversity.

Yasuni is the ancestral territory of the Huaorani people, as well as two other indigenous tribes living in voluntary isolation, the Tagaeri and the Taromenane.

"We welcome this long sought after final step to protect an important part of Yasuni National Park," said Kevin Koenig, Ecuador coordinator for the nonprofit Amazon Watch, who has been monitoring the Yasuni-ITT initiative since its inception.

"This is a big win for Ecuador, and the world," Koenig said. "Now we need more countries to contribute, and for President Correa to keep his word."

Political turmoil and uncertainty has marked the three years of negotiations leading up to yesterday's signing ceremony.

Political turnover led to three different Foreign Affairs ministers and three distinct negotiating teams, while the government continued to allow drilling inside the park and expanded mining concessions throughout the Amazon.

President Correa's public rebuke of his negotiating team after the Copenhagen Climate Summit where the trust fund was originally scheduled to be signed, led to the resignation of the entire team as well as Foreign Minister Fander Falconi.

But Ecuador's civil society organizations, as well as the Huaorani people, kept the proposal alive by pressuring the government and continuing to increase the proposal's popularity nationally and internationally.

The environmental organization, Accion Ecologica with its "Amazon For Life" campaign collected tens of thousands of signatures of support and kept the initiative in the news during times when the government's commitment appeared to wane.

The Huaorani advocated for recognition of the park's importance, the perils of oil extraction, and the need to keep out extractive industries from areas where the nomadic uncontacted Tagaeri and Taromenane people are present.

UNDP already administers more than 30 funds covering 74 countries through its Multi-Donor Trust Fund Office.

Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2010. All rights reserved.

Correa brothers at war in fight for power of Ecuador

President's brother Fabricio launches political party to try to wrest control of country from apparent nemesis Rafael
Rory Carroll, Latin America correspondent
guardian.co.uk,
Ecuador president Rafael Correa

President Correa, who has declared clean government a platform of his rule, accused his brother Fabricio betrayal. Photograph: Juan Barreto/AFP/Getty Images

When ambitious siblings vie for political power there are two extremes. There is the Roman way: Romulus kills Remus for control of the city. There is the Labour way: David and Ed Miliband wish each other luck in the party leadership race.

Somewhere in between – call it the third way – is Ecuador, where President Rafael Correa and his brother Fabricio battle for influence through public insults and metaphorical daggers.

Fabricio has just launched a political party to try to wrest control of the South American country from his younger brother and apparent nemesis, turning a family feud into a political soap opera.

The two fell out a year ago over allegations that Fabricio, an engineer-turned-entrepreneur, used his brother's position to win multimillion-dollar contracts for several companies.

Rafael, 47, who has declared clean government a platform of his rule, accused Fabricio, 50, of betrayal. "I know that my brother will be my brother all of my life, but the same goes for my principles," he said. "I will always do what needs doing, no matter what the personal price is."

The president ordered the cancellation of £50m worth of contracts, though in the end the comptroller general's office found no wrongdoing and dropped the investigation.

Analysts said Rafael must have known of the contracts, not least because his mother was on the board of several of Fabricio's companies.

Rather than slink into the shadows Fabricio struck back, declaring his innocence and launching a political party to challenge Rafael's hold on power.

There is no hint of Romulus-style fratricide but nor is there any attempt at Milibandesque restraint.

Fabricio accused the president of lacking manliness – "nobody has so far had the testicular competence to sue me" – and of lying in the 2006 election campaign in which made him head of one of the continent's most unstable countries.

"I knew he had good intentions and he was seeking the wellbeing of the country, but I didn't know that he was lying to me, just like he lied to 13m Ecuadoreans," Fabricio told BBC News. He branded Rafael a puppet of his leftist ally, President Hugo Chávez. "This is a communist project, led by a political bureau that receives orders from Venezuela."

The president's once-stellar ratings have tumbled amid battles with indigenous groups, unions, the media and cabinet colleagues. However a fractured opposition means he could win a second term in elections slated for 2013. Fabricio said he was considering running himself. "Since no other leader has decided to come forth and take on the challenge, if the circumstances are right, I will be a candidate," he said.


Ecuador signs $3.6bn deal not to exploit oil-rich Amazon reserve

Pioneering deal signed with UN sets up trust fund by wealthy countries worth half expected earnings from potential sale of oil
John Vidal in Bonn and Rory Carroll, Latin America correspondent
guardian.co.uk,

amazon rainforest ecuador

The climate of the Huaorani people, a native tribe in the Amazon rainforest in Ecuador, will benefit from the deal. Photograph: Guardian

How much would you pay for the most biologically rich patch of land on Earth – some 675 sq miles of pristine Amazon, home to several barely contacted indigenous tribes, thousands of species of trees and nearly 1bn barrels of crude oil?

Ecuador, home of the Galapagos Islands, the Andes mountain range and vast tracts of oil-rich rainforest, yesterday asked the world for $3.6bn not to exploit the Ishpingo-Tiputini-Tambococha oil block in the Yasuni national park. A knockdown price, it said, considering the oil alone is worth more than $7bn at today's prices. The 407m tonnes of CO2 that would be generated by burning it could sell for over $5bn in the global carbon markets.

But neither the oil block nor the park is for sale, and under the terms of a unique, legally binding trust fund set up yesterday by the government and the UN, the oil and the timber in Yasuni will never be exploited.

Instead, donor countries, philanthropists and individuals around the world are being invited to pay the money in return for a non-exploitation guarantee.

The idea of rich countries paying poor countries not to exploit their forests in return for financial compensation is being promoted at the global climate talks which reconvened this week in Bonn, Germany. But the idea of paying poor countries not to develop valuable oil reserves is believed to be the most radical and most forward-looking yet.

"The object is to preserve biodiversity and prevent climate change emissions. Ecuador is an oil-exporting country and the oil reserves in Yasuni have been shown to represent 20% of the oil in the whole country," said Helga Serrano, from the Ecuadorean foreign ministry yesterday in Bonn. "We will keep then oil underground indefinitely. We think $3.6bn is a fair contribution from developed countries," she said.

So far, only European countries have shown a firm interest. Germany has said it may pay $800m over 13 years, with Spain, France and Switzerland reportedly considering the offer. Guatemala and Nigeria have asked Ecuador for help with similar programmes.

The plan was first floated by the Ecuadorian government in 2007 when it asked for $350m (£174m) a year to leave Yusuni park oil in the ground, but commitment from the international community has been slow in coming.

Any money raised would be administered by the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and would go to protect 4.8m hectares of land in Ecuador's other national parks – including the Galapagos Islands – and to develop renewable energy sources and build schools and hospitals for indigenous groups.

Conservation groups have been staggered by the biological riches in the park, which is situated at the intersection of the Amazon, the Andes and the equator. It was recently found to have 650 species of tree and shrub within a single hectare – the highest number in the world and more than in the whole of north America. In addition, it has more than 20 threatened mammal species, including, jaguars, otters and monkeys, and several hundred bird species.

The rush for oil in the Amazon has long divided governments and people. Ecuador is fighting a massive battle to get US oil companies to clean up pollution, while indigenous groups have clashed with government forces and companies in neighbouring Peru and Colombia.

Yesterday human rights groups criticised the Ecuadorean government for using the conservation initiative to mask plans to open up other parts of the Amazon to oil development, and to re-open old oil blocks that had been closed because of resistance by indigenous people.

But conservation groups hailed the establishment of the UN trust fund for Yasuni as "historic".

"We welcome this long sought after final step to protect an important part of Yasuni national park," said Kevin Koenig, Ecuador coordinator with Amazon Watch. "This is a big win for Ecuador, and the world. Now we need more countries to contribute, and for [Ecuadorian] President Correa to keep his word."

"We are seeking nothing less than a new paradigm for development. This is what the majority of people in Ecuador want. Yasuni will remain protected through generations," said Daniel Ortega, an environment and climate change ministry spokesman.

But some environmental and indigenous groups cautioned that the deal covered only the eastern fringe of the Yasuni national park and left the rest open to oil and mining projects.

Repsol and the Chinese-owned Andes Petroleum extract oil in the west of the park and last month Ecuador's government said it would tender oil blocks in Pastaza province in the south.

The CONAIE umbrella indigenous organisation warned that the UN-brokered deal was not the end of the fight. "We don't want Correa to offset his lost income from leaving the ITT oil in the ground by opening up other areas of equally pristine indigenous lands," the group's leader, Marlon Santi, told reporters.

Sceptics questioned Ecuador's green credentials given it planned a major new oil refinery and spent billions every year importing and subsidising gasoline and diesel.

Ecuador, UN Create Trust to Protect Oil-Rich Reserve


QUITO – The Ecuadorian government and the United Nations Development Program signed an agreement on Tuesday to move forward with a proposal that the international community pay Quito to forgo oil drilling in a sensitive area of the Amazon.

The signing of the trust accord took place at the Ecuadorian Foreign Ministry in the presence of Vice President Lenin Moreno and UNDP associate administrator Rebeca Grynspan as well as ambassadors and representatives of indigenous communities located in and around Yasuni National Park.

In a press briefing prior to the ceremony, Ecuador’s minister for national patrimony, Maria Fernanda Espinosa, said countries that contribute to the trust will receive Yasuni Guarantee Certificates, or CGYs, bearing Quito’s pledge the crude will remain underground for the indefinite future.

The CGYs, paying no interest and with no expiration date, are to reflect the amount of carbon-dioxide emissions that will be averted as a result of the respective contributions to what is known as the Yasuni-ITT initiative.

“We are talking about those 407 million metric tons (of CO2) that will not be emitted due to not extracting the more than 800 million barrels of petroleum under the earth,” Espinosa said.

Should Ecuador eventually tap the Ishpingo-Tiputini-Tambococha, or ITT, oil reserve, CGY holders would be entitled to full refunds of their contributions to the trust, she said.

With the formal creation of the Yasuni-ITT trust, Ecuadorian officials will visit foreign capitals to solicit contributions, Espinosa told Efe. She said the trust will need to amass a minimum of $100 million in the next 18 months to begin operating.

Espinosa is set to leave here Saturday for China to explain the initiative to officials in Beijing, while another member of Ecuador’s Yasuni-ITT negotiating committee, Ivonne Baki, told Efe that visits to Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Norway, Spain, Italy and the United States are planned for next month.

President Rafael Correa may travel to the Middle East in November to pitch the idea to leaders of oil-rich Arab nations, officials here said.

The board of the Yasuni-ITT trust will comprise three representatives of the Quito government, two from contributing nations and one from Ecuadorian civil society, Espinosa said.

The UNDP’s Grynspan called the Yasuni initiative “innovative, bold” and important for “the entire planet.”

“The contribution Ecuador is making to the world is invaluable,” she said, while Moreno pointed out that Quito is asking the international community for only half of the estimated $7 billion the Andean nation could earn by exploiting the ITT reserves.

Ecuador depends on oil exports to fund about a third of annual government expenditures.

Ecuador President Correa could face challenge from brother

Fabricio Correa (left) and Rafael Correa (right) in archive photos
Fabricio Correa (left) helped his brother (right) during the 2006 election campaign

Ecuador's President Rafael Correa may be about to face a new political opponent.

But the challenger is not just any political foe: it is the president's older brother, Fabricio Correa.

Unlike the Miliband brothers in the UK, both running for the Labour Party leadership with each other's blessing, there is hardly a kind word shared between the Correas.

The brothers have been fighting publicly for a year now, and Fabricio's decision to try to launch a political party has taken the battle up a notch.

President Correa, who has been in office since 2007, and his Alianza Pais governing movement have been losing public support in recent months.

But the weak and fragmented opposition can do little to challenge the president, which is why Fabricio Correa's potential move into politics is attracting attention.

Mutual accusations first emerged after the Diario Expreso newspaper reported in June 2009 that Fabricio Correa's engineering business had boomed since his brother entered the presidential palace.

The president, who has made the fight against corruption a key priority of his term in office, initially called the media reports biased and defended his brother. Fabricio also denied any wrongdoing.

Ecuador's new constitution, approved in 2008, forbids relatives of public officials from winning government contracts.

Fabricio said that he was only a partner in some of the companies involved, and that all the contracts had been obtained through public tenders.

Fabricio Correa
Fabricio Correa: relationship with his brother used to be cordial but not close

But as public opinion grew more negative, the president changed his tone and mind.

"If my brother had been president, I would have never done this to him," said President Correa during one of his weekly radio and TV shows.

He announced that the government would cancel $80m (£50m) worth of contracts that Fabricio's companies had signed with state companies because his brother's involvement was, in his opinion, unethical.

"I know that my brother will be my brother all of my life, but the same goes for my principles," said President Correa. "I will always do what needs doing, no matter what the personal price is."

Christian Zurita, the investigative journalist at Diario Expreso who wrote about the public contracts, says that it would have been impossible for the president not to know about his brother's deals, especially because their mother is on the executive board of several of Fabricio's businesses.

"Fabricio is the older brother, but Rafael is the big brother," says Zurita.

Strong words

In the end, the comptroller general's office found no wrongdoing in the way the contracts were awarded and no further official investigation was pursued.

But the row between the brothers had escalated. Rafael accused his brother of being a greedy "big shot".

Fabricio responded with strong language, accusing Rafael's circle of lacking manliness.

"Nobody has so far had the testicular competence to sue me," said Fabricio.

Rafael Correa (left) and Hugo Chavez (right) in a photo from 6 July 2010
Fabricio has attacked his brother's ties to Venezuela's Hugo Chavez

Fabricio is the eldest in the family, three and a half years Rafael's senior.

The brothers were both born in the port of Guayaquil, Ecuador's largest and richest city.

They both did their undergraduate studies there - Fabricio studied engineering and Rafael economics.

But then Rafael's career took off. He volunteered for a year in an indigenous Quechua community in Ecuador's Andes, before doing postgraduate degrees in Belgium and the US.

When Rafael ran for president in 2006, Fabricio acted as his brother's fundraiser.

During the campaign, Rafael promised to change the political system to give more say to the country's poor and indigenous groups.

But his political project has disappointed people on all sides of the political spectrum.

Which Correa?

Over the past year, indigenous people, environmentalists and students have protested against his policies.

Conservative opponents have meanwhile kept up their criticism of President Correa's close ties to Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

However wide and diverse the opposition might be, so far no clear candidate has emerged to speak up against Rafael - except his brother.

In an e-mail interview, Fabricio said that his relationship with his brother used to be cordial but they did not see each other very often.

"I knew he had good intentions and he was seeking the well-being of the country, but I didn't know that he was lying to me, just like he lied to 13 million Ecuadoreans," Fabricio told BBC News.

"This is a Communist project, led by a political bureau that receives orders from Venezuela."

Such accusations have been routinely dismissed by President Correa.

Ecuador's next scheduled presidential elections are in 2013, and Fabricio has said that he feels a sense of responsibility towards the country.

"Since no other leader has decided to come forth and take on the challenge, if the circumstances are right, I will be a candidate," he said.

While the brothers' discourse is fundamentally different, they do share an ability to work the crowds.

If Rafael's political project continues to lose support, Fabricio's emergence onto the political scene may mean that in three years' time there is still a Correa in the presidency.

The question is which one?

Ecuador Signs Historic Yasuni-ITT Deal with UNDP To Keep Oil in the Soil and CO2 out of the Atmosphere

Amazon Watch

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 2010-08-03

Atossa Soltani, 202-256-9795 or atossa@amazonwatch.org
Paulina Garzón, 718-314-7654 or paulina@amazonwatch.org

Ecuador Signs Historic Yasuni-ITT Deal with UNDP To Keep Oil in the Soil and CO2 out of the Atmosphere

Praise for Pioneering Proposal is Mixed with Concerns by Indigenous Groups Over New Drilling Planned in Southern Ecuador's Pristine Rainforests

Quito, Ecuador – Ecuador plans to sign an agreement today with the United Nations Development Fund (UNDP) that will open an international trust fund to receive donations supporting the government's proposal to keep some 900 million barrels of oil in the ground. The heavy crude is found in three oil reserves beneath the fragile Yasuni National Park – the Ishpingo, Tambococha, and Tiputini (ITT). Three tumultuous years in the making, the deal with UNDP finally spares a significant area of the Park from oil drilling. Initial donor countries include Germany, Spain, France, Sweden, and Switzerland which have collectively committed an estimated US $1.5 billion of the US$3.6 billon that the Ecuadorian government seeks

The plan will keep an estimated 410 million tons of C02-the major greenhouse gas driving climate change-from reaching the atmosphere. This precedent of avoided CO2 emissions could factor into future climate negotiations.

In 2007, Ecuador's President Correa launched the Yasuni-ITT initiative, seeking international financial contributions equaling half of the country's forgone revenues if the government left Yasuni's oil reserve untouched. The proposal seeks to strike a balance between protecting the park and its indigenous inhabitants, while still generating some revenue for Ecuador, a country dependent on oil for 60 percent of its exports.

Covering nearly 2.5 million acres of primary tropical rainforest at the intersection of the Andes and the Amazon close to the equator, Yasuni is the ancestral territory of the Huaorani people, as well as two other indigenous tribes living in voluntary isolation, the Tagaeri and the Taromenane. As a result of its unique location, Yasuni is an area of extreme biodiversity, containing what are thought to be the greatest variety of tree and insect species anywhere on the planet. In just 2.5 acres, there are as many tree species as in all of the US and Canada combined.

"We welcome this long sought after final step to protect an important part of Yasuni National Park," said Kevin Koenig, Amazon Watch Ecuador Coordinator who has been closely monitoring the initiative since its inception. "This is a big win for Ecuador, and the world. Now we need more countries to contribute, and for President Correa to keep his word."

The landmark proposal was an uncertain three years in the making, and on several occasions appeared dead in the water. From the outset, the government insisted on a one-year deadline to raise close to $4.5 billion, which was viewed as an impossibility by potential donors and undercut the proposal's perceived viability. Political turnover led to three different Foreign Affairs ministers and three distinct negotiating teams, while the government implemented seemingly contradictory environmental policies that continued to allow drilling inside the park and expanded mining concessions throughout the Amazon. Correa's public rebuke of his negotiating team after the Copenhagen Climate Summit were the trust fund was originally set to be signed, led to the resignation of the entire team as well as the Foreign Minister and confidant, Fander Falconi.

But Ecuador's civil society organizations, as well as the Huaorani themselves, kept the proposal alive by pressuring the government and continuing to increase the proposals popularity nationally and internationally. The environmental organization, Accion Ecologica with its "Amazon For Life" campaign collected tens of thousands of signatures of support and kept the initiative in the news during times when the government's commitment appeared to wane. The Huaorani continued to raise their voices on the importance of the park, the perils of oil extraction, and the need to keep out extractive industries from areas where the nomadic Tagaeri and Taromenane are present.

Although there is cause for celebration, some of Ecuador's indigenous groups are concerned by the Correa administration's announcement this week to open up areas of Ecuador's roadless, pristine southeastern Amazon region, as well as re-offering older oil blocks that were unsuccessful due to indigenous resistance.

"We hope that the success of the Yasuni proposal doesn't mean a defeat for the forests and people of the southern rainforests," said German Freire, President of the Achuar indigenous people who have land title to almost 2 million acres of intact rainforest, all of which would be opened to new drilling. "We don't want Correa to offset his lost income from leaving the ITT oil in the ground by opening up other areas of equally pristine indigenous lands."

Chevron Outed for Corporate Espionage Spy Scandal in Ecuador's Amazon Rainforest

Amazon Defense Coalition

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 2010-08-03

Karen Hinton at 703-798-3109 or karen [at] hintoncommunications.com
Mitch Anderson at 415-342-4783 or mitch [at] amazonwatch.org

Chevron Outed for Corporate Espionage Spy Scandal in Ecuador's Amazon Rainforest

Atlantic Magazine Exposes Offer to Journalist to Go Undercover to Sabotage $27 Billion Environmental Case

Lago Agrio, Ecuador – Chevron, long accused of engaging in an illegal dirty tricks campaign in Ecuador, tried to recruit an American journalist to take part in a corporate espionage spy ring in Ecuador's Amazon to undermine an expected multi-billion judgment against the oil giant in a high-profile environmental lawsuit, according to an article published in the latest issue of The Atlantic.

Mary Cuddehe, an Iowa-born graduate of Columbia University with a Masters degree in Journalism, published an article documenting that the investigative firm Kroll has been running an espionage operation in Ecuador on behalf of Chevron, which faces a $27 billion damages claim for creating what experts believe is the worst oil-related catastrophe on the planet.

A Kroll employee offered Cuddehe $20,000 for six weeks of work to appear as an independent journalist while working as an undercover spy in Lago Agrio, Ecuador. Lago Agrio is the jungle town in the Amazon where the trial is being held at Chevron's request after the case was originally filed in New York federal court several years ago.

The Kroll employee, identified as a former journalist named Sam, paid for Cuddehe to travel to Bogota where the case was explained and she was offered the money in the suite of a luxury hotel. Cuddehe said in a blog that she has published articles in The New Republic, the Miami Herald, and for the Associated Press.

"Last February, I got an offer from Kroll ... to go undercover as a journalist-spy in the Ecuadorian Amazon," wrote Cuddehe in the article, titled "A Spy In the Jungle".

"At first I thought I was underqualified for the job. But as it turned out I was exactly what they were looking for: a pawn."

She added: "...there was a reason [Chevron] wanted me... If I went to Lago Agrio myself and pretended to write a story, no one would suspect that the starry-eyed young American poking around was actually shilling for Chevron."

Representatives for the Amazon communities who are victims of the environmental damage blasted Chevron and Kroll for engaging in corporate espionage. The article suggested that numerous Kroll employees were working on the Ecuador project from a base in neighboring Colombia.

With headquarters in New York, Kroll is considered the largest investigative firm in the world and is publicly traded.

"This is disturbing evidence of questionable if not outright illicit conduct by Chevron and Kroll, possibly subjecting Chevron's lawyers to sanctions or penalty in the U.S.," said Jonathan Abady, an American lawyer who represents the plaintiffs. "It is hard to imagine Kroll engaging in this conduct alone without oversight from Chevron's lawyers."

"Legitimate investigations are fine; paying journalists to lie is unethical and a direct attack on the credibility of all journalists worldwide," he added.

Abady noted that Kroll investigators who misrepresent themselves at the behest of legal counsel could be violating the ethical rules of the legal profession, subjecting Chevron's lawyers to sanctions in the United States.

Events described in Cuddehe's article fit with a larger pattern in recent years of unethical and potentially illegal activity by Chevron to undermine the rule of law in Ecuador. The company has admitted to deliberately dumping more than 18 billion gallons of toxic waste into the Amazon when it operated an oil concession from 1964 to 1990.

Last year, the Amazonian communities accused Chevron of violating the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in Ecuador by engaging in a "sting" operation where a bribe was offered to help remove the trial judge from the case. An investigation determined that the "sting" operation and bribe offer was made by a long-time Chevron employee, Diego Borja.

Chevron later paid to move Borja to a luxury villa close to Chevron's global headquarters in California to avoid questioning by Ecuadorian prosecutors.

Once in the U.S., Borja was taped in a telephone conversation with childhood friend Santiago Escobar as saying Chevron was "cooking" evidence in the Ecuador trial, using fake soil samples, and representing its own laboratory as independent when in fact it was operated by Chevron agents. He described himself to Escobar as being in charge of Chevron's dirty tricks campaign in Ecuador.

Borja also admitted to Escobar that Chevron bribed an Ecuadorian army official in 2005 to charge local indigenous leaders were planning a terrorist attack against Chevron's lawyers, forcing the cancellation of a critical judicial inspection of a contaminated Chevron well site.

Information relating to the Borja sting operation has been turned over to the U.S. Department of Justice.

In 2006, lawyers for the Amazonian communities were hit with a series of anonymous threats that prompted protest letters from the International Commission of Jurists and the United Nations.

The U.S. law firms employed by Chevron to defend the Ecuador trial are Gibson Dunn, King & Spalding and Jones Day. One or more of the firms likely is overseeing Kroll's work, said Abady.

"I have two words for Chevron's management and Board of Directors: Hewlett Packard," said Ilann Maazel, who represents the Amazonian plaintiffs in the United States. "This is outrageous and potentially exposes Chevron to even more liability."

In 2006 the Chairperson of Hewlett Packard's Board, Patricia Dunn, was forced to resign and fight criminal charges from California's Attorney General for authorizing espionage to find out the source of leaks to journalists. Chevron is a California-based company.