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CAMPAIGNS:
BP Espacio are working closely with Colombian social organisations in the region of Casanare, where BP have been extracting oil and gas since the early 1990’s. BP’s presence in the region created a humanitarian and ecological crisis, which continues up to the present day. In the late 1990’s, B.P. was exposed by in the British media for complicity in human rights abuses. The company had contracted the 16th Brigade of the Colombian army to protect its oilfields, despite the Brigade’s dire human rights record, which includes murder, “disappearances”, torture, rape and the forced displacement of communities. B.P. also admitted to having employed the private security company Defence Systems Limited to provide counter-insurgency training to Colombian police and army units charged with the protection of B.P’s installations. This training was described as “lethal” by a DSL employee and included the surveillance and intimidation of peasant leaders who were mounting protests against BP’s ecological damage, denial of labour rights and lack of social investment. Although BP claims to have changed its practices, the rural communities continue to report murders by the army as well as ongoing environmental damage and poor treatment of the local workforce. On 16 March 2007, sixteen-year-old Roque Torres and his father Daniel were tortured and killed by the Colombian army. Daniel and Roque were just two of hundreds of peasant farmers from the oil-rich region of Casanare, Colombia, who have been murdered or “disappeared” at the hands of the army or state-linked paramilitaries in the context of B.P.’s oil-extraction activities in the region. In response to this, groups in the Red de Hermandad, including Espacio and COSPACC - a Colombian organisation set up by displaced community leaders from Casanare – organised a delegation to Casanare in the summer of 2007. Colombian organizations are demanding popular sovereignty over energy resources, creating the space to a move for alternatives to hydrocarbon-based fuels. This focus on sovereignty is important not only for dealing with the social impact of multinationals but also because the profit motive runs contrary to the need to take action on climate chaos. For example, whilst B.P. brands itself as “beyond petroleum” the company has a “reserve replacement rate” of 113%[1], i.e. they are increasing the amount of oil they produce through new discoveries. If this continues B.P. will not reduced its carbon emission, irrespective of it’s spending on alternative technologies. B.P. itself admits that the oil and gas it extracts emit around 570 million tonnes of carbon dioxide per year, roughly equivalent to the carbon dioxide emission of the entire United Kingdom[2]. The 2006 Stern Report predicted that by the middle of the century 200 million people may be permanently displaced by rising sea levels, floods and drought because of climate change. Whether as a result of forced displacement by the Colombian army or forced displacement from climate chaos, BP’s oil-extraction activities are most threatening to the poorest people.
(If you speak Spanish, there is also the possibility of working in Colombia as a volunteer providing international accompaniment to social organisations – see get involved) More information and resources:
Additional resources in Spanish
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