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- From: Greenpeace via Jym Dyer <jym@mica.berkeley.edu>
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive,alt.activism,talk.environment
- Subject: NEWS: Unocal Abandons Pacific Waste-Trade Scheme
- Followup-To: talk.environment
- Date: 8 Jan 1993 00:52:21 GMT
- Organization: The Naughty Peahen Party Line
- Lines: 45
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Message-ID: <Greenpeace.7Jan1993.1652@naughty-peahen>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: remarque.berkeley.edu
- Keywords: environment press
-
- [Greenpeace Press Release from Greenbase -- Redistribute Freely]
-
- RETURN TO SENDER: UNOCAL ABANDONS PACIFIC WASTE-TRADE SCHEME
- Marshall Islands Rejects 'Toxic Colonialism'
-
- SAN FRANCISCO, December 17, 1992 (GP) -- Officials in the
- Marshall Islands have rejected UNOCAL's scheme to ship toxic
- soil to Kwajalein Atoll because the oil company "never
- negotiated in good faith," according to an attorney for a
- Marshalls development agency.
-
- Los Angeles-based UNOCAL, which had tried to convince the
- Kwajalein Atoll Development Authority (KADA) to accept
- 13,000 or more tons of waste soil, announced Wednesday it had
- "re-evaluated the project" and ordered the waste barge Pacific
- Trader to turn back from the Marshalls. The soil, dug up from
- UNOCAL gas stations in Hawaii, is now enroute to Seattle, where
- U.S. law mandates stricter decontamination treatment than it
- would have received in the Marshalls.
-
- "UNOCAL sent us a notice yesterday saying they were withdrawing
- from the deal, when in fact there was never a formal agreement,"
- KADA attorney David Lowe of Vacaville, Calif., told Greenpeace
- Thursday. He said KADA was trying to determine if the soil was
- suitable for construction of an island causeway, but UNOCAL did
- not supply the proper information, and the scheme collapsed
- after the oil company made unacceptable demands.
-
- Greenpeace, which exposed the scheme and helped mobilize
- opposition throughout the Pacific, applauded KADA, the
- Marshallese and other people of the region for rejecting
- UNOCAL's "toxic colonialism." If the scheme had gone through,
- it would have been the first waste-trade shipment from the
- United States to a Pacific nation, and documents supplied to
- Greenpeace show that the former UNOCAL engineer who attempted
- to arrange the shipment has plans for similar schemes throughout
- the Pacific.
-
- "While we are pleased that this particular shipment has been
- turned around, the Pacific remains at risk unless all the
- countries of the region band together to ban waste trading,"
- said David Rapaport, a Greenpeace clean development specialist.
- "We realize the Marshall Islands has difficulty obtaining
- construction material, but shipping them toxic waste is not
- the answer."
-