Interesting read Oil companies affect in Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea, and Ecuador.

Here is a short paper I recently wrote I thought you guys might find it interesting.

Oil companies fucking suck btw, they take advantage of consumers and pollute our environment tremendously.

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Crude World: The Violent Twilight of Oil

Oil’s history is one of blood,

corruption, war, pollution, and vast riches. It first started with John D

Rockefeller’s Standard Oil Company. Those were the days when oil was thought to

be unlimited and a barrel of crude cost about one dollar (about $10-20 in

today’s value). Oil has a long and arduous history. The first major oil

companies were mostly American; they took advantage of developing countries

around the world. ExxonMobil, Texaco, Shell Oil, Chevron, and other large oil

companies took advantage of under-developed countries such as Equatorial Guinea,

Nigeria, and Ecuador, polluting their environment, dumping enormous amounts of

toxic waste-water, bribing politicians, and much more (Maas).

Petroleum dates back to Babylon where

according to Herodotus asphalt was used in the construction of the towers of

Babylon. The first commercial oil well was drilled in Poland in 1853 and

expanded quickly after then due to the rise of the internal combustion engine

and plastics. Throughout the 1950s-1980s approximately 10 of the top 20

companies in America with the highest revenue were oil companies. Nowadays, 6

of the top 20 companies in America are oil companies; this is due to dwindling

oil supplies, American oil companies losing their oil fields as their contracts

run out, and other (mostly state-owned) companies take over the oil fields in

their respective countries.

Interestingly, oil-rich countries are

also the poorest countries per capita (other than a few exceptions such as

Norway). In Equatorial Guinea corruption is rampant as exemplified by their

President, Teodoro Obiang. In his book entitled “Crude World: The Violent

Twilight of Oil,” Peter Maas says, “His personal armada was a projection of fear,

not strength, because uneasy lies the head of a man who clutches a nation’s

wealth. Obiang, whose salary was reportedly $60,000 a year, had recently been

discovered to control bank accounts exceeding $700 million.” He adds that,

“every dysfunctional oil country is dysfunctional in its own way.” In

Equatorial Guinea, large oil corporations bribed corrupt dictators and

officials who awarded exploration and production contracts that were unduly

generous to the oil companies (Maas, 35). Maas adds that, “In a nation where

ownership of a soccer ball was a sign of wealth,” Obiang a multi-millionaire

dictator has exploited his country’s oil for his own personal gain (Maas, 33).

He further says, “If the revenues were spread evenly around the country, the

people in Equatorial Guinea would be among the richest in the world.” (Maas,

37) Oil in Equatorial Guinea has not led to prosperity for the average citizen

and has polluted their environment tremendously. Furthermore, Obiang was helped by American

bankers and oilmen who deposited over 700 million dollars into his personal

bank accounts at Riggs bank in Washington D.C. (Peter Maas, 252)

In Nigeria, Africa’s biggest

exporter of oil, the story is not very different. Peter Maas says, “I visited

Nigeria to learn how oil had turned a once healthy country, and the people who

lived there, into a specimen of rot.” Foreign oil companies, after finding oil

in the Niger Delta, paid the government military to protect their wells and

paid local militias not to attack them; they were actually feeding the conflict

between the militias and the government which were able to buy weapons with the

oil companies’ money. Before oil was

discovered in Nigeria, the country had a growing industrial sector and a

healthy farm economy. With its British-educated elite, Nigeria’s prospects were

bright in 1960 when it became independent. Furthermore, its people were led to

believe that the newly discovered oil treasure in the delta guaranteed a

brilliant future. And yet as Peter Maas says, “Now the world’s eighth- largest

exporter of oil, Nigeria earned more than $400 billion from oil in recent

decades, yet nine out of ten citizens live on less than $2 a day and one out of

five children dies before his fifth birthday.” (Maas, 53) Additionally oil has

brought colossal environmental and health costs to Nigeria. Flaring of released

gases when oil is extracted is common and releases carcinogens such as benzene,

benzopyrene, and toluene. Furthermore released metals into the air supply

include mercury, arsenic, and chromium and emissions of sulfur dioxide and

nitrogen oxide are so severe in the delta that acid rain eats through

sheet-metal roofs (Maas, 65).

Until the drillers arrived, the Orient

region of Ecuador was an undisturbed rain forest inhabited by indigenous Indian

tribes,” said Maas. Ecuador produces about 500,000 barrels of oil a day, with

the largest portion of exports going to California. Peter Maas adds, “Whether

it is irony, parody or farce, one of the most environmentally conscious states

in America depends on oil from a region that has suffered a catastrophe to

provide it.” (Maas, 78) To illustrate the disregard oil companies have for the

environment lets look at the Trans-Ecuadorian Oil Pipeline. The pipelines and

its subsidiaries rest on rickety pylons one or two feet high and just a few

feet—or sometimes inches—from roads. Swerving into these pipelines is common

and leads to oil spills. Furthermore, collisions aren’t even necessary to

create spills because the pipelines are old and poorly maintained. Up until the

1990s local residents say the environmental carelessness involved the spraying

of oil on dirt roads, so as to suppress the waves of dust that rose from them

(Maas, 79). Pollution in Ecuador has been unacceptable. During extraction, a

slurry of oil, salt, and metals including benzene, chromium 6, and mercury

comes up. In America this slurry is disposed of by reinjection the tainted

water into the reservoirs or filtering out contaminants, but in Ecuador Texaco

dumped the brew into unlined waste pits or poured it directly into the Amazon’s

rivers. More than 18 billion gallons of wastewater was disposed of this way as

well as 16 million gallons of oil—far more than the Exxon Valdez supertanker

spill and the BP spill in the Gulf of Mexico (Maas, 79).

Oil, considered “liquid gold,” has

been a calamity for these three countries. Big and powerful oil companies took

advantage of the weak, corrupt, established governments. And as Peter Maas

said, “in countries too weak to control powerful industries that tend to behave

responsibly only if they are required to, the invasion of bulldozers and other

machines of extraction is a disaster foretold.” (Maas, 77) As a society we must

recognize these problems and hold oil companies responsible for the irreparable

harm they have done. Oil’s history is not pretty or nice; this liquid gold is a

curse for the earth and without proper regulations and fighting from

international organizations will remain so.





Works Cited

Maas, Peter. Crude World: The Violent

Twilight of Oil
. Knopf. 22 Sept. 2009. Web. 23 Apr. 2012.



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threads for later, i have a coal paper i wrote in college that il upload later, oil is going to get nasty in the next decade along with freshwater reservoirs within a few decades. Super interesting stuff!
 
Holy shit this is extremely well written....IMO. I'm scouring the internet atm trying to find essays to help improve my skills with commas. I was so happy to find one on NS, but it seems that this essay doesn't need any type of correcting :) GJ
 
do i have your permission to use some your sources and bits of your thing on nigeria cause i need to write a essay on africa problems by sunday
 
Well as interesting as that sounds.... I'll have to pass on reading about graphene based batteries written by someone who posted it online to get it edited.

Nothing against you, just not my ideal reading.
 
How did you write an essay about the effects of the oil industry in West Africa and not include even a sentence about Boko Haraam and other jihadist groups who regularly sabatoge pipelines and facilities and cause massive environmental damage using explosives on infrastructure like this causing spills and nasty oil fires, fighting their war against the infidels?
 
I'm sorry I just wrote this in 2 hours so its not very detailed. I used Peter Maas's book and he doesn't speak about that extensively (a little bit but not a lot)
 
Definitely want to read the book now. I also heard something that a lot of American companies offer/offered to build the refineries and what not for these countries for free and then through exporting the oil out for extremely cheap prices the countries can never pay off there debts so basically are completely being controlled by Americans or other richer country moguls. Not 100% sure on any of that though just something I heard and would like to read some more.
 
Why does it matter, just because China does something worse does that make it okay for the states to do the same. Actually it makes it extremely hypocritical for the states to say anything about another countries policies. Just makes you feel better to deflect the guilt away from home I guess. Kind of sucks really. We are so dependent these days on oil that its pretty much impossible to stop unless you can afford a hybrid car or just ride a bike around every day.
 
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