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Chevron Owes More to Richmond

by: Antonia Juhasz  |  The San Francisco Chronicle

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Oil workers drill a well near Taft, California. With oil prices high, companies like Chevron have jumped at the chance to drill new wells. (Photo: Getty Images)

    This week, Fortune magazine released its list of the 500 largest corporations in the world. With a nearly 25 percent increase in its revenues from 2007, Chevron Corp. moved from the sixth to the fifth largest corporation in the world. Only 36 countries on the planet had GDPs larger than Chevron's $263 billion in 2008 revenues.

    By revenue, Chevron is the largest corporation in California, the second-largest U.S. oil corporation and the third-largest corporation in the nation. Chevron's nearly $24 billion in profits for 2008 were its largest on record and the fourth-highest profits of any corporation in the world. Chevron's profits have increased every year since 2002, increasing by an astounding 2,100 percent.

    Those who have not benefited are the Richmond community, the site of Chevron's oldest refinery, and the state of California.

    In November, Richmond voters passed Measure T. At the current price of oil, it would provide the city with an additional $16 million annually from Chevron (adding 11 percent to the city's tax revenues). Chevron sued, challenging the new tax.

    Chevron has also repeatedly blocked state initiatives to impose a severance tax on oil extracted in the state. California is the only major oil producing state in the nation without such a tax. It is estimated that imposition of a severance tax could bring in over $1 billion a year to the California state budget.

    Moreover, the Los Angeles Times reports Chevron's role in lobbying to keep initiatives to increase corporate taxation more broadly off the table in the state's budget negotiations.

    The Chevron Richmond refinery is already the largest industrial polluter in the Bay Area. The Environmental Protection Agency reported nearly 100,000 pounds of toxic waste from the site in 2007, including more than 4,000 pounds of benzene, a known human carcinogen. The refinery is now, and has been, listed as in "high priority violation" of air compliance standards, among other violations, by the EPA every year since at least 2006.

    Chevron now wants to retool the refinery to burn heavier crude that can be much more polluting than lighter grades. The senior scientist at Richmond's Communities for a Better Environment has found no technological fix available to ensure that a refinery can mitigate this type of pollution. CBE joined other community health and environmental groups to block the retooling, and the court ruled in their favor. The groups are now asking the city to better regulate the refinery by specifically capping the type of crude it can refine to ban the heavier more polluting grades. Chevron has said it plans to appeal the ruling. (It will also give Richmond community programs $565,000 in grants connected to the project.)

    Unfortunately, Chevron had already begun construction at the refinery and subsequently laid off 1,100 workers. Community groups have asked Chevron to instead work on necessary upgrades they have been demanding for years to make the refinery cleaner and safer - work that would create many jobs.

    More beneficial to the long-term health of all who live in the city - including refinery workers - is not only a cleaner and safer refinery, but a company willing to give back to the communities within which it operates and the state it calls home.

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    Antonia Juhasz is the director of the Chevron program at Global Exchange in San Francisco. www.GlobalExchange.org

  

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If you want a really good

If you want a really good example of Chevron's generosity in the regions in which they operate, take a close look at what they've done to (not FOR) the Niger Delta. Nat.Geo. carried a striking article on this a few months back; I'll never forget the photo of a native woman cooking tapioca with the heat from a huge gas flare.

My Dad worked as painter in

My Dad worked as painter in the tanks for Chevron - Standard Oil located near Richmond. This was when they did not wear respirators back in the 1950's. He died of lung cancer at the age of 62. The history of illness and cancer associated with that part of Contra Costa County is astonishing, and Richmond, its projects, are and were particularly hard hit. It would be a very interesting investigative report. Because those individuals still located in Richmond, San Pablo, and surrounding communities are just working to make a living, they basically have no voice in the legal or environmental community. If some of them could escape and become lawyers, they just might be able to take on Chevron in order to mandate cleaner safer refineries. As it stands, some residents die young, and have neither time, nor means to implement change.

Oil just becomes more

Oil just becomes more expensive now that we are in the cleanup phase. They are just going to have to admit it that cleaning up after oil makes it too expensive as a fuel to use it. To scrub all of the excess carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere would cost many trillions of dollars.

Maybe if Chevron & Exxon

Maybe if Chevron & Exxon etal paid their fair share--as everyone else, the stat of california would be solvent.

This makes me a lot happier

This makes me a lot happier about loosing 1/2 my state SSI money to insure the states solvency. I think it's time to start a recall of the state legislature and the gropenator. Gray Davis had the state in far better shape when he got recalled. this Austrian idiot is a joke in terms of his political savvy. I'm an equal opportunity recaller by the way. The Demofatcats and the Repugnicans both need to go!

...Richmond does not get its

...Richmond does not get its fair share from Chevron , California is insolvent...there is Turmoil in Wishi -Washi about Health care.. about Bail outs for a not so broke financial system,... about the unrepentant auto industry,..about wars in Afghanistan,Irak, and possibly Iran...about Palestine and Israel..about the monstous Lobbies and ensuing possible Representive buy outs. Meanwhile....Chevron and the rest of the Oil Cartel, who are the Root Cause of all the messes now existing in the U.S..and in the World as we know it, are doing their funny business with- out a word from anyone who could be influential in curbing the avaricious nature of these bandit business men..they think, andthey are, under the radar..I hope not for very long!!! .What say Mr President...???Take them on..or do we dare...!!! paul milo