A lake contaminated by repeated spills near Dorissa base, oil block 1-AB. Photo courtesy of Amazon Watch.

By Jeremy Hance A new report shows that the Corrientes region of the Peruvian Amazon, which suffered decades of toxic contamination by Occidental Petroleum (OXY), is far from being cleaned-up. The survey, conducted by US non-profit E-Tech International, found that heavy metals, volatile organic compounds, and hydrocarbons still exist at levels above the safety limits set by Peru and continue to threaten the Achuar indigenous community, who have long fought against the oil companies. “Pollution from oil-spills still exists in many sites that have not been properly cleaned. When it rains, the oil runs down and contaminates the rivers and streams where the people source their food,” said Guevara Sandi Chimboras, an Achuar leader who has worked as an environmental monitor investigating contamination in the region. Despite the findings of the study, the current oil company in the region, Pluspetrol, and the Peruvian government have claimed that the clean-up is near finished. Argentine-based Pluspetrol inherited OXY’s toxic mess byway of an agreement in 2000, which compelled Pluspetrol to clean-up the area. From 1971 to 2000 OXY employed practices long outlawed in the US, including pumping millions of barrels of production waters into the area’s rivers and dumping toxic waste in unlined earthen pits. “The report leaves no room for doubt. Oxy’s massive industrial pollution of the region continues to threaten the Achuar people living in block 1-AB and Pluspetrol’s remediation has been entirely inadequate,” said Gregor MacLennan, Program Coordinator for Amazon Watch Peru, a non-profit that works to protect the rainforest and support indigenous groups in Amazon Basin. “The Peruvian Government must withhold its approval on the remediation operation until there is adequate cleanup.” …

Heavy oil pollution remains in Amazon, despite company claiming clean-up is finished