Chevron CEO John Watson: Is the New Boss Same as the Old Boss?

Chevron has a new boss man, and in an ironic kick in the pants Chevron’s new CEO John Watson is the very man that orchestrated Chevron’s takeover of Texaco, and with it the 18 billion gallons of toxic waste water and 17 million gallons of crude oil deliberately dumped in Ecuadorian rainforest communities. Given Watson’s intimate understanding of Chevron’s toxic legacy there is no question he knows what is necessary to clean up their mess and compensate the communities that have been living with the effects of Chevron’s contamination for decades.

The Clean Up Ecuador Campaign has launched a global petition to Mr. Watson, with an accompanying video-message (below) from the affected communities of the Ecuadorian Amazon.

Watson is stepping into a mess that former CEO Dave O’Reilly left behind when he skipped out on the reeling company on 12/31. Unfortunately, judging the reaction by Chevron today in Houston where marathon runners had their free speech silenced, and comments attacking Amazon Watch’s global petition in yesterday’s Sphere article it seems that Watson is committed to enabling the same negligence towards human rights as his predecessor. Watson may choose to define his tenure by continuing down the O’Reilly path that just last year had Chevron publicly aligning themselves with known felons, losing precedent setting refinery battles, being wholly rejected by the US Trade Representative, and being a lightning rod for a thriving climate justice movement at their front door.

However, dealt such a rotten hand Mr. Watson stands at the most opportune time for an oil giant’s CEO to actually step it up…or just step in it. RAN’s newest campaign Change Chevron see that Watson holds an unmatched opportunity to right past wrongs and transform an industry from criminal to catalyst. Yet, there is a long way to go. Prior to this moment Chevron has not only ignored the communities they impact, they blatantly insult them. Chevron relies on lobbying and a brutal PR campaign to evade responsibility of, what experts call, the “Amazon Chernobyl”. As a recent Independent article points out Chevron seems to be standing firm in it’s refusal to pay any damages, even if ordered in a court.  In fact a Chevron spokesman has promised a “lifetime of litigation.”

Will Watson build a tenure on human rights or legal fights?

“It’s Human Right’s my Dear Watson”

In the above video, community members hope Watson’s tenure stands human rights, asking him to visit Ecuador and address the oil company’s toxic legacy. The video and petition lead the calls being made for John Watson to take this new approach as CEO and to rectify the human rights and environmental disaster experts call the “Amazon Chernobyl.”

Emergildo Criollo, a leader from the Cofan tribe, and rally cry for this weekend’s Chevron Houston Marathon where activists are running on his behalf, says in the video, “We don’t want to continue dying from cancer.” Criollo lost two sons to fatal illnesses after coming into contact with toxic waste-water dumped into Amazon waterways by Texaco. Mariana Jimenez, another community member living with Chevron’s lifetime litigation strategy invites CEO John Watson to Ecuador and says that he “will be received well” and that they are only “hoping for a rational person”. Seems like a reasonable request. However, considering the last guy, rational has never been one of Chevron’s (or any oil companies) strong point.

Around the contaminated region, an area roughly the size of Rhode Island, there are thousands more cases like Emergildo and Mariana’s. Joining with 30,000 other indigenous people and campesinos, they are plaintiffs in the landmark lawsuit against Chevron in Ecuador that has the potential to change the landscape of the oil industry and catalyze a new era of accountability to the communities big oil operates in.

I’m pretty confident real solutions to the human rights violations and climate crisis are not going to come easily from Watson and Chevron. However I am confident that as pressure continues to boil over, the oil giant will be held accountable to their past, present, and continuing attempts to sell out communities and the climate for a cheap barrel of crude.

7 Responses to “Chevron CEO John Watson: Is the New Boss Same as the Old Boss?”


  1. 1 Santiago A. Cueto Jan 19th, 2010 at 1:26 am

    The international business community should condemn Chevron’s actions in the region and its ongoing abuse of the civil justice system-abuses that now span three continents. I have written an extensive post on this topic at http://tiny.cc/EZL7F on the International Business Law Advisor blog.

  2. 2 Matthew Feb 3rd, 2010 at 2:12 pm

    The pollution is caused by Ecuador’s own (gov’t run) oil company, not chevron. Anybody who believes otherwise has been lied to

  3. 3 jason Mar 17th, 2010 at 4:28 pm

    oh really, matthew? and what do you have to back up this claim, other than skewed information from chevron itself???

  4. 4 Bessie Robinson Jun 30th, 2010 at 11:25 am

    Chevron has a new CEO hopefully he cleans up their policies on discrimination I work for chevron for ten years and they continued to practice these treatment I complained it only got worse they use lies, deceit, allowed terrorist treat, treaten, yelled told me I was not welcome to just quit wiltheld job promotions and gave me voo doo doll in black chevron bags it’s call discremination, hate Mr. CEO my name is Bessie Robinson a proud African American Mr. CEO were is the chevron way.

  1. 1 Chevron “Freaking Out” about RAN Runners in this Weekend’s Houston Marathon « It’s Getting Hot In Here Trackback on Jan 16th, 2010 at 7:36 pm
  2. 2 Stupido « Pingback Trackback on Jan 17th, 2010 at 1:10 pm
  3. 3 Chevron appoints new CEO: Will he lead the way in cleaning up the company? Trackback on Feb 7th, 2010 at 5:58 pm
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About Nick


Nick Magel is not a fan of oil companies (or any fossil fuel for that matter). He's fortunate to have worked with folks that hold similar views while Communications Manager at Amazon Watch in San Francisco. Prior to that Nick served as Director of the Freedom from Oil campaign at Global Exchange. Nick went to graduate school at the Audubon Expedition Institute where he focused on radicalizing education models while developing a deeper application of critical and feminist pedagogies in environmental education.

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