Channel Button

There are 33 articles on this title. You are reading the article ranked and rated #1 by Helium's members.

Politics, News & Issues   >

Pulitzer Center

Get a Widget for this title

Should US environmental standards apply when multinational companies develop the petroleum resources of fragile ecosystems such as Peru's Amazon?

Title endorsed in part by:

Necessity and Neglect: Making Multinationals Accountable for What Matters

The enforcement of strict environmental standards in fragile ecosystems such as Peru's Amazon is the obligation of the consumer. After all, multinational companies would not commit to the largest industrial project ever undertaken in Peru if they could not count on consumers to purchase the petroleum resources they exploit at great cost to their own coffers and at greater cost to the livelihood of local peoples and ecosystems.

In crying foul at the poor environmental and social performance of oil companies in the Amazon what are we really objecting to? The vast majority of us are not objecting to meeting energy needs at the pump and the power plant. We can no more deny Peruvians the right to develop their own energy resources than we can deny our own need for electricity and transport fuel. We may rail at an exploitative and unjust economic order that allows multinational companies to trample on the rights of innocent bystanders, but in doing so we dodge the uncomfortable truth that this reviled order operates under that tacit approval of consumers like you and me.

An oil development in West Texas will have a hard time becoming a poster-child for the environmental movement. Why is that, when the West Texas well involves the same fundamental process and objectives that underpin petroleum development in the Amazon? It is the imbalance of power, and the perceived injustice of the Amazon development that strikes us as fundamentally wrong, and with good reason. The Inter-American Development Bank estimates that $1.6 billion of natural gas lies beneath Amazonian rainforest, yet this figure is meaningless to previously undisturbed indigenous communities residing within the Camisea petroleum concessions.

We recoil at that collision of economic behemoths like the Hunt Oil Company and isolated tribes in the Amazon because Hunt has the capacity to radically transform the lives of Camisea residents while those residents have virtually no power to stop the environmental degradation, spread of disease, and social disruption that follow the drilling rigs. It's just not a fair fight, and it seems little can be done to affect the behavior of the multinational villain.

To a certain degree this is true. The project defies international and American law, and is being carried out under the auspices of the Inter-American Development Bank, indicating that safeguards have failed this time. Hunt Oil's composition


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Should US environmental standards apply when multinational companies develop the petroleum resources of fragile ecosystems such as Peru's Amazon?

  • 1 of 33

    by Peter Shattuck

    Necessity and Neglect: Making Multinationals Accountable for What Matters

    The enforcement of strict environmental standards

    read more

  • 2 of 33

    by Linhah

    The title of this article might better be Is God Truly Dead? To begin with, the United States has no environmental standards.

    read more

  • 3 of 33

    by Gary C. Gibson

    The application of U.S. law to American citizens visiting foreign countries is something of a difficult question that is

    read more

  • 4 of 33

    by Patricia Dexheimer

    If there is one place on the planet earth that must be protected and safeguarded, it is the South and Central American rain-forests,

    read more

  • 5 of 33

    by Eve Redstone

    Ever since Sting brought it to world attention the plight of the Amazonian rainforest has been an international concern.

    read more

View All Articles on:
Should US environmental standards apply when multinational companies develop the petroleum resources of fragile ecosystems such as Peru's Amazon?

Add your voice

Know something about Should US environmental standards apply when multinational companies develop the petroleum resources of fragile ecosystems such as Peru's Amazon??
We want to hear your view. Write_penWrite now!

Helium Debate

Cast your vote!

Do most governments have the political will needed to end poverty?

Click for your side.

215160

Featured Partner

The Responsibility Project

The Responsibility Project is the brainchild of Liberty Mutual Insurance. As an insurance company, we like respons...more

What is Helium? | Buy Web Content | Contact Us | Privacy | User agreement | DMCA | User Tools | Help | Community | Helium’s Official Blog | Link to Helium

Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA