Berkeley, Oakland urge oil money transparency
Originally posted, October 14, 2009 on http://www.ibabuzz.com/politics/2009/10/14/berkeley-oakland-urge-oil-money-transparency/
Berkeley City Council last night approved a resolution urging the U.S. Senate to approve S.1700,
the "Energy Security Through Transparency Act" by U.S. Sen. Richard
Lugar, R-Ind., which would urge the Obama Administration to require
that companies disclose payments to foreign governments for oil, gas
and mineral rights. Oakland City Council passed a similar resolution last week.
"Good governance in extractive industries contribute to a better
domestic investment climate for U.S. businesses, increase the
reliability of commodity supplies, promote greater U.S. energy security
and thereby strengthen our national security," says the summary on Lugar's Web site.
San Francisco-based Justice in Nigeria Now hails the cities' actions as a moral victory.
"I was tortured and imprisoned by the Nigerian military for my
peaceful protests against Shell Oil's destruction of our land," Suanu
Kingston Bere, a Nigerian activist who spoke at the Berkeley City
Council meeting, said in JINN's news release. "I believe the City's
support sends a strong message that communities in the U.S are
concerned about the human rights abuses and environmental damage
associated with oil extraction. I do not want to see my people continue
to go through what I went through."
Berkeley's resolution also calls on the State Department to support
third-party peace talks in the Delta to address environmental
destruction and lack of investment in the oil producing region. The
resolution was co-sponsored by Councilmembers Jesse Arreguin, Darryl Moore and Max Anderson and was introduced to the council through the Berkeley Peace and Justice Commission, which worked with JINN to draft it.
JINN says 50 years of oil exploitation in the Niger Delta has
produced over $700 billion in oil revenues shared between the Nigerian
government and oil giants like San Ramon-based Chevron as well as Exxon Mobil and Shell.
More than 40 percent of Nigeria's oil is exported to the U.S. Yet
despite the corporate oil wealth, local residents' quality of life has
deteriorated - their drinking polluted, their food fisheries poisoned,
their access to education, health care and even electricity limited.
"Oil companies in Nigeria have had long a relationship with the
notoriously corrupt and historically brutal Nigerian government where
rampant corruption, fraudulent elections and violent suppression of
peaceful protests are the norm in the Delta," Nigerian writer and
activist Omoyele Sowore said in JINN's news release. "The proposed ESTT
Act in the Senate is an important step toward holding oil companies
accountable for their collusion with the Nigerian government, which
protects their profits while killing and injuring innocent local people
and destroying the Delta's fragile environment."
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