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Whistleblower reveals disturbing details allegedly hidden by major company: 'Hiding stuff from the government'
Whistleblower reveals disturbing details allegedly hidden by major company: 'Hiding stuff from the government'

Yahoo

time08-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Whistleblower reveals disturbing details allegedly hidden by major company: 'Hiding stuff from the government'

Thanks to a whistleblower, the BBC World Service and Environmental Investigation Agency have uncovered staggering amounts of unreported oil spills and environmental impacts caused by the Colombian oil company Ecopetrol. According to the BBC, one former Ecopetrol employee, Andrés Olarte, blew the whistle on the oil company's allegedly nefarious activity. He worked there from 2017 to 2019 and witnessed routine disregard for the company's environmental impact. He told the BBC that superiors would deflect his questions about pollution data. When he left, Olarte shared troubling data with the EIA, which the BBC confirmed came from Ecopetrol's servers. The data reveals that Ecopetrol has caused more oil spills and pollution in Colombia than it reported, indicating that the company conceals spills from authorities. Data from January 2019 showed 839 sites in Colombia marked with "unresolved environmental impacts" labels. Olarte told the BBC: "It lists which one is hidden from an authority and which one is not, which shows the process of hiding stuff from the government." Felipe Bayón, Ecopetrol's CEO from 2017 to 2023, denied to the BBC that there was ever a "policy to withhold information about pollution." Ecopetrol has processing plants located along Colombia's longest river, the Magdalena. The reckless pollution has impacted countless people and wildlife. Fishing communities are finding fish reeking of crude oil. Yuly Velásquez, president of Fedepesan, a federation of fishing organizations, told the BBC: "If we don't go fishing, we don't eat." However, challenging oil companies also comes with a high cost. She said: "If we speak and report, we are killed. … And if we don't report, we kill ourselves, because all these incidents of heavy pollution are destroying the environment around us." Olarte and many others have received threats from armed groups after challenging Ecopetrol, which Bayon called "absolutely unacceptable." There is currently no evidence that Ecopetrol was involved in these threats. Do you worry about air pollution in and around your home? Yes — always Yes — often Yes — sometimes No — never Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. The Magdalena River basin's biodiversity is also threatened. Locals are finding deceased animals in surprising numbers, which some are describing as a "massacre." Biodiverse areas, like the Magdalena basin, are crucial to the planet's health. Biodiversity stabilizes climate conditions, supports the food and freshwater supply for humans, and reduces disease spread. The river itself is also a source of water for millions of people. The Convention on Biological Diversity describes Colombia as a "megadiverse" country where roughly 10% of the world's biodiversity exists, making it a crucial region to protect. Unfortunately, Ecopetrol's pollution is stifling it. Companies must be held responsible for their environmental damage. Stronger environmental policies and strictly enforced standards are necessary. It's important to protect advocates like Olarte and Velásquez. And supporting brands that prioritize the environment and pressuring those that don't to change is the best way to influence positive change for the planet. As individuals, using our purchasing power is a surprisingly effective way to enact change. Harnessing it for good can contribute to the changes that benefit people and the planet. Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.

Whistleblower reveals oil giant's 'awful' pollution
Whistleblower reveals oil giant's 'awful' pollution

Yahoo

time20-03-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Whistleblower reveals oil giant's 'awful' pollution

Colombian energy giant Ecopetrol has polluted hundreds of sites with oil, including water sources and biodiverse wetlands, the BBC World Service has found. Data leaked by a former employee reveals more than 800 records of these sites from 1989 to 2018, and indicates the company had failed to report about a fifth of them. The BBC has also obtained figures showing the company has spilled oil hundreds of times since then. Ecopetrol says it complies fully with Colombian law and has industry-leading practices on sustainability. The company's main refinery is in Barrancabermeja, 260km (162 miles) north of the Colombian capital Bogota. The huge cluster of processing plants, industrial chimneys and storage tanks stretches for close to 2km (1.2 miles) along the banks of Colombia's longest river, the Magdalena – a water source for millions of people. Members of the fishing community there believe oil pollution is affecting wildlife in the river. The wider area is home to endangered river turtles, manatees and spider monkeys, and is part of a species-rich hotspot in one of the world's most biodiverse countries. Nearby wetlands include a protected habitat for jaguars. When the BBC visited last June, families were fishing together in waterways criss-crossed by oil pipelines. One local said some of the fish they caught released the pungent smell of crude oil as they were cooked. In places, a film with iridescent swirls could be seen on the surface of the water - a distinctive signature of contamination by oil. A fisherman dived down in the water and brought up a clump of vegetation caked in dark slime. Pointing to it, Yuly Velásquez, president of Fedepesan, a federation of fishing organisations in the region, said: "This is all grease and waste that comes directly from the Ecopetrol refinery." Ecopetrol, which is 88% owned by the Colombian state and listed on the New York Stock Exchange, rejects the fishers' claims that it is polluting the water. In response to the BBC's questions, it says it has efficient wastewater treatment systems and effective contingency plans for oil spills. Andrés Olarte, the whistleblower who has shared the company's data, says pollution by the firm dates back many years. He joined Ecopetrol in 2017 and started working as an adviser to the CEO. He says he soon realised "something was wrong". Mr Olarte says he challenged managers about what he describes as "awful" pollution data, but was rebuffed with reactions such as: "Why are you asking these questions? You're not getting what this job is about." He left the company in 2019, and shared a large amount of company data with US-based NGO the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) and later with the BBC. The BBC has verified it came from Ecopetrol's servers. One database he has shared, dated January 2019, contains a list of 839 so-called "unresolved environmental impacts" across Colombia. Ecopetrol uses this term to mean areas where oil is not fully cleaned up from soil and water. The data shows that, as of 2019, some of these sites had remained polluted in this way for over a decade. Mr Olarte alleges that the firm was trying to hide some of them from Colombian authorities, pointing to about a fifth of the records labelled "only known to Ecopetrol". "You could see a category in the Excel where it lists which one is hidden from an authority and which one is not, which shows the process of hiding stuff from the government," says Mr Olarte. The BBC filmed at one of the sites marked "only known to Ecopetrol", which was dated 2017 in the database. Seven years later, a thick, black, oily-looking substance with plastic containment barriers around it was visible along the edge of a section of wetland. Ecopetrol's CEO from 2017 to 2023, Felipe Bayón, told the BBC he strongly denied suggestions that there was any policy to withhold information about pollution. "I say to you with complete confidence that there is not, and was not any policy nor any instruction saying, 'these things can't be shared'," he said. If you are outside of the UK, watch Colombia: Petroleum, Pollution and Paramilitaries on YouTube Mr Bayón blamed sabotage for many oil spills. Colombia has a long history of armed conflict, and illegal armed groups have targeted oil facilities - but "theft" or "attack" are only mentioned for 6% of the cases listed in the database. He also said he believed there had been a "significant advance" since then in solving problems that lead to oil pollution. However, a separate set of data shows Ecopetrol has continued to pollute. Figures obtained by the BBC from Colombia's environmental regulator, the Autoridad Nacional de Licencias Ambientales (Anla), show Ecopetrol has reported hundreds of oil spills per year since 2020. Asked about the 2019 database of polluted sites, Ecopetrol admits it has records of 839 environmental incidents, but disputes that all of them were classed as "unresolved". The firm says 95% of polluted sites that have been classed as unresolved since 2018 have now been cleaned up. It says all pollution incidents are subject to a management process and are reported to the regulator. The data from the regulator includes hundreds of spills in the Barrancabermeja area where Ms Velásquez and the fishers live. The fisherwoman and her colleagues have been monitoring biodiversity in the area's wetlands, which feed into the Magdalena River. She said there had been a "massacre" of fauna. "This year, there were three dead manatees, five dead buffalo. We found more than 10 caimans. We found turtles, capybaras, birds, thousands of dead fish," she said last June. It is not clear what caused the deaths - the El Niño weather phenomenon and climate change may be factors. A 2022 study by the University of Nottingham lists pollution - from oil production and other industrial and domestic sources - as one factor among several, including climate change, that are degrading the Magdalena river basin. Mr Olarte left Ecopetrol in 2019. He moved to his family home near Barrancabermeja, and says he met with an old contact to ask about job openings. Soon afterwards, he says an anonymous caller rang his phone threatening to kill him. "In the call I understood they thought I had put complaints against Ecopetrol, which was not the case," he says. Mr Olarte says more threats followed, including a note that he showed to the BBC. He does not know who made the threats and there is no evidence that Ecopetrol ordered them. Ms Velásquez and seven other people also told the BBC they had received death threats after challenging Ecopetrol. She said an armed group had fired warning shots at her house and spray-painted the word "leave" on the wall. The fisherwoman is now protected by armed bodyguards paid for by the government, but the threats have continued. Asked about the threats Mr Olarte described, the former CEO Mr Bayón said they were "absolutely unacceptable". "I want to make it totally clear… that never, at any time, was there any order of that sort," Mr Bayón said. Ms Velásquez and Mr Olarte both know the risks are real. Colombia is the most dangerous country in the world for environmental defenders, according to the NGO Global Witness, with 79 killed in 2023. Experts say such killings are linked to Colombia's decades-long armed conflict, in which government forces and paramilitaries allied to them have fought left-wing rebel groups. Despite government attempts to end the conflict, armed groups and drug cartels remain active in parts of the country. Matthew Smith, an oil analyst and financial journalist based in Colombia, says he does not believe Ecopetrol managers are involved in threats by armed groups. But he says there is an "immense" overlap between former paramilitary groups and the private security sector. Private security firms often employ former members of paramilitary groups and compete for lucrative contracts to protect oil facilities, he says. Mr Olarte has shared internal Ecopetrol emails showing that in 2018, the company paid a total of $65m to more than 2,800 private security companies. "There is always that risk of some sort of contagion between the private security companies, the types of people they employ, and their desire to continually maintain their contract," Mr Smith says. He says this could potentially even include kidnapping or murdering community leaders or environmental defenders in order to "ensure that the Ecopetrol's operations proceed smoothly". Mr Bayón said he was "convinced that the checks and due diligence were done" regarding the company's relationships with private security companies. Ecopetrol says it has never had relationships with illegal armed groups. It says it has a strong due diligence process and carries out human rights impact assessments for its activities. The BBC contacted other members of Ecopetrol's former leadership from the time of Mr Olarte's employment, who strongly deny the allegations in this report. Now living in Germany, Mr Olarte has been submitting complaints about Ecopetrol's environmental record to the Colombian authorities and the company itself - so far, without meaningful result. He has also been in a series of legal cases against Ecopetrol and its management, related to his employment there, which are as yet unresolved. "I did this in defence of my home, of my land, of my region, of my people," he says. Mr Bayón stressed the economic and social importance of Ecopetrol to Colombia. "We have 1.5 million families who don't have access to energy or who cook with firewood and coal," he said. "I believe that we must continue to rely on clean production of oil, gas, all energy sources, to transition without ending an industry that is so important for Colombians." And Ms Velásquez remains determined to continue speaking out, despite the threats. "If we don't go fishing, we don't eat," she said. "If we speak and report, we are killed… And if we don't report, we kill ourselves, because all these incidents of heavy pollution are destroying the environment around us." Four-minute showers - a parched Bogota rations water Colombia 'deadliest country for environmentalists'

Ecopetrol: Whistleblower reveals Colombia oil giant's ‘awful' pollution
Ecopetrol: Whistleblower reveals Colombia oil giant's ‘awful' pollution

BBC News

time20-03-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

Ecopetrol: Whistleblower reveals Colombia oil giant's ‘awful' pollution

Colombian energy giant Ecopetrol has polluted hundreds of sites with oil, including water sources and biodiverse wetlands, the BBC World Service has leaked by a former employee reveals more than 800 records of these sites from 1989 to 2018, and indicates the company had failed to report about a fifth of BBC has also obtained figures showing the company has spilled oil hundreds of times since says it complies fully with Colombian law and has industry-leading practices on company's main refinery is in Barrancabermeja, 260km (162 miles) north of the Colombian capital huge cluster of processing plants, industrial chimneys and storage tanks stretches for close to 2km (1.2 miles) along the banks of Colombia's longest river, the Magdalena – a water source for millions of people. Members of the fishing community there believe oil pollution is affecting wildlife in the wider area is home to endangered river turtles, manatees and spider monkeys, and is part of a species-rich hotspot in one of the world's most biodiverse countries. Nearby wetlands include a protected habitat for the BBC visited last June, families were fishing together in waterways criss-crossed by oil local said some of the fish they caught released the pungent smell of crude oil as they were places, a film with iridescent swirls could be seen on the surface of the water - a distinctive signature of contamination by oil. A fisherman dived down in the water and brought up a clump of vegetation caked in dark to it, Yuly Velásquez, president of Fedepesan, a federation of fishing organisations in the region, said: "This is all grease and waste that comes directly from the Ecopetrol refinery."Ecopetrol, which is 88% owned by the Colombian state and listed on the New York Stock Exchange, rejects the fishers' claims that it is polluting the response to the BBC's questions, it says it has efficient wastewater treatment systems and effective contingency plans for oil spills. Andrés Olarte, the whistleblower who has shared the company's data, says pollution by the firm dates back many joined Ecopetrol in 2017 and started working as an adviser to the CEO. He says he soon realised "something was wrong".Mr Olarte says he challenged managers about what he describes as "awful" pollution data, but was rebuffed with reactions such as: "Why are you asking these questions? You're not getting what this job is about."He left the company in 2019, and shared a large amount of company data with US-based NGO the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) and later with the BBC. The BBC has verified it came from Ecopetrol's servers. One database he has shared, dated January 2019, contains a list of 839 so-called "unresolved environmental impacts" across uses this term to mean areas where oil is not fully cleaned up from soil and water. The data shows that, as of 2019, some of these sites had remained polluted in this way for over a Olarte alleges that the firm was trying to hide some of them from Colombian authorities, pointing to about a fifth of the records labelled "only known to Ecopetrol"."You could see a category in the Excel where it lists which one is hidden from an authority and which one is not, which shows the process of hiding stuff from the government," says Mr BBC filmed at one of the sites marked "only known to Ecopetrol", which was dated 2017 in the database. Seven years later, a thick, black, oily-looking substance with plastic containment barriers around it was visible along the edge of a section of wetland. Ecopetrol's CEO from 2017 to 2023, Felipe Bayón, told the BBC he strongly denied suggestions that there was any policy to withhold information about pollution."I say to you with complete confidence that there is not, and was not any policy nor any instruction saying, 'these things can't be shared'," he said. If you are outside of the UK, watch Colombia: Petroleum, Pollution and Paramilitaries on YouTube Mr Bayón blamed sabotage for many oil has a long history of armed conflict, and illegal armed groups have targeted oil facilities - but "theft" or "attack" are only mentioned for 6% of the cases listed in the also said he believed there had been a "significant advance" since then in solving problems that lead to oil a separate set of data shows Ecopetrol has continued to obtained by the BBC from Colombia's environmental regulator, the Autoridad Nacional de Licencias Ambientales (Anla), show Ecopetrol has reported hundreds of oil spills per year since about the 2019 database of polluted sites, Ecopetrol admits it has records of 839 environmental incidents, but disputes that all of them were classed as "unresolved".The firm says 95% of polluted sites that have been classed as unresolved since 2018 have now been cleaned says all pollution incidents are subject to a management process and are reported to the regulator. The data from the regulator includes hundreds of spills in the Barrancabermeja area where Ms Velásquez and the fishers fisherwoman and her colleagues have been monitoring biodiversity in the area's wetlands, which feed into the Magdalena said there had been a "massacre" of fauna. "This year, there were three dead manatees, five dead buffalo. We found more than 10 caimans. We found turtles, capybaras, birds, thousands of dead fish," she said last is not clear what caused the deaths - the El Niño weather phenomenon and climate change may be factors.A 2022 study by the University of Nottingham lists pollution - from oil production and other industrial and domestic sources - as one factor among several, including climate change, that are degrading the Magdalena river Olarte left Ecopetrol in 2019. He moved to his family home near Barrancabermeja, and says he met with an old contact to ask about job openings. Soon afterwards, he says an anonymous caller rang his phone threatening to kill him."In the call I understood they thought I had put complaints against Ecopetrol, which was not the case," he Olarte says more threats followed, including a note that he showed to the BBC. He does not know who made the threats and there is no evidence that Ecopetrol ordered Velásquez and seven other people also told the BBC they had received death threats after challenging said an armed group had fired warning shots at her house and spray-painted the word "leave" on the wall. The fisherwoman is now protected by armed bodyguards paid for by the government, but the threats have about the threats Mr Olarte described, the former CEO Mr Bayón said they were "absolutely unacceptable"."I want to make it totally clear… that never, at any time, was there any order of that sort," Mr Bayón Velásquez and Mr Olarte both know the risks are real. Colombia is the most dangerous country in the world for environmental defenders, according to the NGO Global Witness, with 79 killed in say such killings are linked to Colombia's decades-long armed conflict, in which government forces and paramilitaries allied to them have fought left-wing rebel government attempts to end the conflict, armed groups and drug cartels remain active in parts of the Smith, an oil analyst and financial journalist based in Colombia, says he does not believe Ecopetrol managers are involved in threats by armed he says there is an "immense" overlap between former paramilitary groups and the private security security firms often employ former members of paramilitary groups and compete for lucrative contracts to protect oil facilities, he Olarte has shared internal Ecopetrol emails showing that in 2018, the company paid a total of $65m to more than 2,800 private security companies."There is always that risk of some sort of contagion between the private security companies, the types of people they employ, and their desire to continually maintain their contract," Mr Smith says this could potentially even include kidnapping or murdering community leaders or environmental defenders in order to "ensure that the Ecopetrol's operations proceed smoothly". Mr Bayón said he was "convinced that the checks and due diligence were done" regarding the company's relationships with private security says it has never had relationships with illegal armed groups. It says it has a strong due diligence process and carries out human rights impact assessments for its BBC contacted other members of Ecopetrol's former leadership from the time of Mr Olarte's employment, who strongly deny the allegations in this living in Germany, Mr Olarte has been submitting complaints about Ecopetrol's environmental record to the Colombian authorities and the company itself - so far, without meaningful has also been in a series of legal cases against Ecopetrol and its management, related to his employment there, which are as yet unresolved."I did this in defence of my home, of my land, of my region, of my people," he Bayón stressed the economic and social importance of Ecopetrol to Colombia."We have 1.5 million families who don't have access to energy or who cook with firewood and coal," he said. "I believe that we must continue to rely on clean production of oil, gas, all energy sources, to transition without ending an industry that is so important for Colombians."And Ms Velásquez remains determined to continue speaking out, despite the threats."If we don't go fishing, we don't eat," she said. "If we speak and report, we are killed… And if we don't report, we kill ourselves, because all these incidents of heavy pollution are destroying the environment around us."

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