Environment
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Vol. XXI, No. 1
Friday-Saturday, July 27-28, 2007 | MANILA, PHILIPPINES
Environment
BY ALONSO SOTO, Reuters
Ecuador tries novel balance of oil and environment
El Coca, Ecuador — Under pressure to preserve the environment while at
the same time ease the poverty of his people, Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa
has come up with an unusual solution.
He wants wealthy nations to pay Ecuador $350 million a year in exchange
for leaving an estimated one billion barrels of oil under the ground in the
pristine Yasuni rain forest.
"I think oil has brought us more bad than good," Mr. Correa said during a
recent visit to the bustling Amazonian oil town of El Coca. "We need to do
something about it."
Environmentalists around the world have celebrated the idea, apparently
the first of its kind, as a way to preserve a delicate environment without
creating an economic burden for the cash-strapped nation where six in 10 people
are poor.
The move comes amid growing popularity of "carbon offsetting," in which
First World residents concerned about climate change make donations to
compensate for the environmental damage their consumer habits cause.
But critics wonder if the politically unstable Ecuador, which relies on
oil for nearly half of its export revenues, can keep this promise to the
international community or whether authorities are trying to have their cake and
eat it too.
Climate change
The plan involves creating a trust fund for donations or accepting debt
pardons from other countries or multilateral lenders like the International
Monetary Fund.
The $350 million would constitute about half the annual revenues Ecuador
thinks it could make from extracting oil from the field, partly located inside
the 2.4 million-acre (982,000-hectare) Yasuni National Park.
Former energy minister Alberto Acosta has pointed out that all the oil in
the Ishpingo-Tambococha-Tiputini field would only be enough for 12 days of
global crude consumption.
Government officials say Norway, a group of Italian lawmakers and even one
undisclosed oil company have inquired about the plan.
"It sounds ridiculous, but when you compare that money with Ecuador’s
foreign debt, it’s actually a small quantity," said Matt Finer, a scientist with
US-based environmental coalition Save America’s Forests.
"Rich nations have to chip in."
The Yasuni is home to species ranging from endangered white-bellied spider
monkeys to rare jaguars that live alongside indigenous groups that live isolated
from the outside world and still hunt with spears and blowguns.
Mr. Correa, a close ally of Venezuelan leftist President Hugo Chavez, has
startled Wall Street by threatening not to pay Ecuador’s $10.3-billion foreign
debt.
He is embroiled in a power struggle with Congress and opposition lawmakers
who say he is scaring off oil investment.
He also openly backs a $6-billion lawsuit filed by indigenous groups who
accuse US-based Chevron of polluting a large swath of the Ecuadorean Amazon.
Doubts abound
The proposal’s detractors say Ecuador cannot ensure the park’s sanctity
given political turmoil that has at times halted oil operations and has made Mr.
Correa the eighth president in 10 years.
"Correa is asking the international community to dive in to see if there
is water in the pool," said Daniel Erikson, an analyst with the Inter-American
Dialogue, a Washington-based think tank.
Mr. Correa has said Ecuador will begin oil development next year if the
government cannot secure the funds by then.
Even if Ecuador can promise to halt the contamination of multinational oil
behemoths, it may struggle to control an equally serious contamination threat to
Yasuni — migrants already setting up farms and shantytown dwellings there.
But supporters of Mr. Correa’s idea say the best way to limit the
migration to the park is to ensure there are no oilfield jobs to draw them
there.
"Oh God, what I wouldn’t do to halt oil development," said Alonso
Jaramillo, chief of eight rangers that watch over the park, roughly the size of
Vermont.
"I shake every time I hear about new oil development in my park."
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