Ecuador's Indigenous communities face pollution's heavy toll

In Ecuador, the Indigenous communities confront a grim reality as pollution and illness shadow their lives.

Gabriela Barzallo reports for palabra.


In short:

  • Indigenous communities in Ecuador suffer from environmental pollution and health issues due to decades of oil exploitation by companies like Texaco, now Chevron.
  • The pollution has led to a rise in cancers and other diseases among the local population, with legal battles against Chevron yielding little relief.
  • Despite Chevron's claims of remediation, the affected communities continue to face severe environmental and health crises, with limited support from the Ecuadorian government.

Key quote:

"In a'ingae, my native language, the words oil, contamination, and cancer did not exist until Texaco arrived on our lands."

— Don Arturo, elder of the A'i Kofán Siangoé community

Why this matters:

Legal actions launched against oil companies and state agencies have aimed to address violations of constitutional rights to clean water, health, food, and nature. However, the process has been slow, and communities have expressed frustration with the lack of accountability and support from the state and the companies involved.

Be sure to listen to Dr. Carlos Gould on the Agents of Change in Environmental Justice podcast, discussing global energy poverty and indoor air pollution.

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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