Chevron (-) A Corporate Illumination Document
Edit this PageChevron Corporation-
"While Chevron's marketing contracts with Iraq yield the company vast profits, the big money -- and the company's big hopes for the future -- lies in controlling Iraqi oil under the ground, not just selling it overseas. As then Chevron CEO Kenneth Derr told a San Francisco audience in 1998, "Iraq possesses huge reserves of oil and gas -- reserves I'd love Chevron to have access to." Chevron has found many ways to pursue this goal, particularly following the opening provided by the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq..."
Environmentalista and anti-war protesters combined forces on March 15 to shut down Chevron Oil Refinery for a day. Richmond Mayor Gayle McLaughlin speaks.
Play Energyville - Chevron's take on SimCity, its a little "free" game where the only way to win is to drill for oil. This is traight propaganda!
"part-time poets" taping human energy
"part of the solution"
Alternatives won't work
This is just funny, but fake
An oil company as part of the solution??
Searching for only one kind of energy
Your way of life
Chevron Corporation-
Proclaiming that it wants to "tap human energy," Chevron, a descendent of Standard Oil, and one of the largest oil companies in the world has launched one of the slickest "greenwashed" campaigns yet seen.
This page is dedicated to the Cheveron Corporation. We hope to recognize marketing
attempts that affect the conceptual reputation of Chevron and placing those next
to actual business practices.
Actual Business Practices
Please post statistics and data revealing the business activity of Chevron. This would include but is not limited to: annual investments, job structuring, budget suggestions, properties and assets.
Chevron and Myanmar (Burma)
Chevron's Pipeline Is the Burmese Regime's Lifeline
"According to Marco Simons, U.S. legal director at EarthRights International: "Sanctions haven't worked because gas is the lifeline of the regime. Before Yadana went online, Burma's regime was facing severe shortages of currency. It's really Yadana and gas projects that kept the military regime afloat to buy arms and ammunition and pay its soldiers.""Chevron and Iraq
No Blood for Chevron: Anti-war protesters take their opposition to Chevron's gates"While Chevron's marketing contracts with Iraq yield the company vast profits, the big money -- and the company's big hopes for the future -- lies in controlling Iraqi oil under the ground, not just selling it overseas. As then Chevron CEO Kenneth Derr told a San Francisco audience in 1998, "Iraq possesses huge reserves of oil and gas -- reserves I'd love Chevron to have access to." Chevron has found many ways to pursue this goal, particularly following the opening provided by the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq..."
Environmentalista and anti-war protesters combined forces on March 15 to shut down Chevron Oil Refinery for a day. Richmond Mayor Gayle McLaughlin speaks.
Marketing
commercials and marketing actions of Chevron that present them as green.Play Energyville - Chevron's take on SimCity, its a little "free" game where the only way to win is to drill for oil. This is traight propaganda!
"part-time poets" taping human energy
"part of the solution"
Alternatives won't work
This is just funny, but fake
An oil company as part of the solution??
Searching for only one kind of energy
Your way of life
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"tap human energy"?? You know what I immediately thought when I read that? "Soylent green is people!"
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http://www.alternet.org/workplace/64310/
Chevron was one of the first companies to receive marketing contracts following the 2003 invasion of Iraq and continues to market significant quantities of Iraqi oil today. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, Chevron has been refining oil from Iraq at its Richmond refinery since the war began. Rather than use its new profit bounty to upgrade this heavily polluting 106-year-old refinery, Chevron is using its financial and political prowess to try to force Richmond to accept a "retooling" of the refinery to burn dirtier, more polluting, sulphur-rich crude.
While Chevron's marketing contracts with Iraq yield the company vast profits, the big money -- and the company's big hopes for the future -- lies in controlling Iraqi oil under the ground, not just selling it overseas. As then Chevron CEO Kenneth Derr told a San Francisco audience in 1998, "Iraq possesses huge reserves of oil and gas -- reserves I'd love Chevron to have access to." Chevron has found many ways to pursue this goal, particularly following the opening provided by the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq. ..
...As General John Abizaid, retired head of U.S. Central Command and military operations in Iraq, recently told a Stanford audience of the Iraq War, "Of course it's about oil, we can't really deny that."
http://www.alternet.org/workplace/79611/