Ecuadorian people power sets challenge for world: End oil apocalypse 🌎🌱
Alliance of Indigenous nations, environmental organizations & youth activists historic win for Amazon ecosystem
WE WON! We’ve kicked Big Oil out of one of the most biodiverse rainforests on the planet! We’ve protected the last two Indigenous peoples living in voluntary isolation in Ecuador! We’ve saved the Yasuní rainforest for the jaguars, the scarlet macaws, and the howler monkeys! We’ve kept 726 million barrels of oil in the ground!
Just minutes ago, we learned the news: the Ecuadorian people have massively voted to halt oil drilling in the rainforest of Yasuní!
That means that oil drilling will be banned in a significant portion of Yasuní from now onwards, and Ecuador’s state oil company will need to dismantle and remove infrastructure that it has set up over the last decades.
Celebrate this historic moment by telling your friends and family! We sent Big Oil packing!
We write to you on behalf of a coalition of organizations - Alianza Ceibo, Amazon Frontlines, CONAIE, CONFENIAE, and Yasunidos - who have worked for over a decade to give the Ecuadorian people the chance to directly decide whether or not to drill for oil in the most biodiverse rainforest on the planet!
And guess what? People Power beat back Big Oil! People Power protected the forests and the rivers! People Power is the solution to the climate crisis!
Ecuador has now become the first country in the world to halt oil drilling through direct climate democracy! By putting the choice over nasty extractive projects directly in the hands of the Ecuadorian people - and not in the hands of the politicians, which are lined with dirty oil money - we were able to achieve one of the most consequential climate victories over the fossil fuel industry!
This incredible milestone for our climate, for Indigenous Rights, for the rainforest could never have been possible without the unity and grassroots organizing of Indigenous and non-Indigenous activists relentlessly campaigning for the protection of Yasuní across the country and beyond.
And it wouldn’t have been possible without the global solidarity and support of people like you spreading the good word and uplifting the voices of Indigenous peoples on the frontlines. Our strength is in our unity!
Share this message of victory with the world, spreading hope and encouragement at a time when many need it.
Over the coming weeks and months, we’ll work around the clock to ensure that the oil companies leave Block 43 in Yasuní, we’ll double down on efforts to fortify Indigenous power, autonomy and land defense systems across the Amazon, and we’ll share our model of climate action with others so that we can build off this precedent and secure the permanent protection of our world’s most biodiverse places and Indigenous lands.
We know that governments and extractive interests won’t stop preying on other territories, so the fight is far from over!
For now, it’s time to celebrate.
Thank you for making history with us and for being part of this movement!
In community,
Alex Lucitante, Ceibo Alliance
Leonidas Iza Salazar, CONAIE
Marlon Vargas, CONFENIAE
Nemonte Nenquimo, Amazon Frontlines & Ceibo Alliance
Pedro Bermeo, Yasunidos
Ecuador Becomes the First Country in the World to Halt Oil Drilling Through Direct Climate Democracy
Referendum outcome permanently protects one of the world’s most biodiverse places, marking a major victory for Indigenous rights, rainforest conservation & global climate
Puyo, Ecuador, August 21st, 2023 – On Sunday, August 20th, 2023, in a historic referendum held during the first round of the presidential elections, Ecuadorian citizens massively voted in favor of keeping over 726 million barrels of oil underground in the Yasuní National Park deep in the northern Amazon Rainforest, one of most biodiverse regions on the planet and home to two of the world’s last Indigenous communities living in voluntary isolation.
At a time when the climate crisis intensifies around the world and the Amazon rainforest fast approaches an irreversible tipping point, the referendum sets a global precedent for the democratization of climate politics. Nearly 60% of the population voted to halt oil drilling, making Ecuador become the first country in the world to determine the limits of resource extraction through a referendum, putting the decision over the fate of the Yasuni rainforest to citizens instead of politicians and corporations.
The binding sentence permanently bans oil drilling in the Ishpingo-Tambococha-Tiputini (ITT) oil project, located on the eastern edge of the Yasuní National Park, where state oil company Petroecuador currently produces more than 57,000 barrels of oil per day, approximately 12% of Ecuador’s oil production. The Ecuadorian government is required to halt the operations and dismantle infrastructure within one year, as well as carry out remediation and reforestation. The decision comes as a major blow to the fossil fuel industry, the biggest driver of climate change, which has operated with impunity and polluted millions of acres of Indigenous rainforest territories in the country for over half a century.
The Ecuadorian people’s decision to leave oil underground in Yasuní marks a major victory for Indigenous rights, rainforest conservation and the climate. The decision permanently protects nearly 2,000 hectares of Amazon rainforest and safeguards the ancestral homeland of the Waorani people and their relatives living in voluntary isolation, the Tagaeri and Taromenene communities. By banning oil extraction in this area of the Amazon, 345 million tons of carbon will also be prevented from releasing into the atmosphere.
Grassroots movements in Ecuador are increasingly positioning the South American nation at the vanguard of climate solutions and global resistance against extractivism. Ecuador was the first country in the world to recognize the rights of nature in 2008. The Yasuní referendum also builds on the 2019 landmark win of the Waorani Indigenous people protecting half-a-million acres of primary rainforest territory from oil drilling.
The referendum is the result of over a decade of grassroots organizing and legal battle. In May, the country’s Constitutional Court authorized the vote to be included on the ballot of the election. In the months leading up to the vote, Indigenous and non-Indigenous activists and organizations led campaigning efforts through mobilizations, assemblies, and digital media. Over the past month, the campaign has garnered worldwide attention, with numerous international celebrities and activists pronouncing themselves: Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Ruffalo, Greta Thunberg, Jada Pinkett Smith, Jason Momoa, Leonor Varela, Gael Garcia Bernal, among others.
Created in 1979, Yasuní National Park – a biodiversity epicenter located at a geographical crossroad at the intersection of the Andes, the Amazon, and the Equator – is central to the future well-being of the entire planet. Since oil drilling began in 2016 under the administration of former President Rafael Correa, over 689 hectares of rainforest in Yasuní have been degraded by the oil industry, the equivalent of 1,200 American football fields. In addition, 23 detrimental oil spills have been recorded within the ITT, as well as a marked expansion of the agricultural frontier and illegal hunting from the construction of new roads.
By eliminating one of the country’s most significant oil fields, the vote for Yasuní also poses a significant challenge to Ecuador’s oil-dependent economy and accelerates the debate about the country’s transition towards a fossil-fuel free future. Public opposition against oil drilling is also set to tarnish the nation’s reputation and image in the oil industry, discouraging future investments.
As presidential elections head to their second round in October, Ecuador faces monumental challenges ahead. The forthcoming administration will need to grapple with a crippled economy, rising poverty and an unprecedented insecurity crisis wrought with political violence and organized crime. The limitation on oil drilling is also susceptible to make other oil-rich Indigenous territories subject to increased targeting and illegal activity such as mining, logging and poaching become more rampant.
In the coming months, campaign organizers and the Indigenous movement will work to ensure compliance with the sentence and use the precedent to boost efforts for the permanent protection of the Amazon rainforest and climate-critical Indigenous territories, and advocate for a just transition away from fossil fuels.
Declarations from Indigenous leaders and campaigners:
Leonidas Iza Salazar, President of CONAIE:
“The Ecuadorian people have added their grain of corn for the world, and with this victory, they have lit a spark from this territory for the world to see. This victory shows that we humans are taking action to save our planet during these times of climate crisis. Through this referendum, we have saved Yasuní in the heart of the Amazon rainforest, the home of Indigenous peoples. As Ecuadorians, we are paving the way to create solutions to the problems that we face as humanity. We hope other countries around the world see this triumph and our message, so that other citizens can also exercise their rights and use direct democracy to save life, save the forest, save nature and ourselves as humans. We call on other countries to unite, we must all unite to safeguard human life and our Mother Earth, she is the only home we have!”
Pedro Bermeo, Founding member of Yasunidos:
“The outcome of this referendum is a victory for all Ecuadorians. It shows us that the greatest national consensus at this time is in the defense of nature, the defense of Indigenous peoples and nationalities, the defense of life. The majority of Ecuadorian society believes that Yasuní, the most biodiverse place on the planet, must be protected, that the millions of animals that live in this sacred space should be protected, and that the lives and rights of Indigenous peoples, including communities living in voluntary isolation, must be respected. The fight isn’t over, even if politicians separate us, nature unites us, and we will work together to ensure the government complies with the will of Ecuadorian people.”
Nemonte Nenquimo, Waorani Leader & Goldman Prize Winner:
“Today is a historic day! As a Waorani woman and mother, I feel overjoyed with Ecuadorians’ resounding decision to stop oil drilling in my people’s sacred homeland. Finally, we are going to kick oil companies out of our territory! This is a major victory for all Indigenous peoples, for the animals, the plants, the spirits of the forest and our climate! I know our ancestors who cared for the forest for thousands of years are also rejoicing, they have been speaking through us during this struggle. Yasuní gives life to our world, and Ecuadorian society has finally woken up to this and voted to protect the forest and respect nature! They have finally listened to our voices as Indigenous peoples! We have lived with the consequences of over half a century of oil exploitation, it hasn’t brought any development, it has only destroyed nature, our territories, our cultures. People are now realizing, the crises we face aren’t going to be solved by exploiting more oil. It’s about respecting Mother Earth and uniting to create a better world for our children, for future generations! Ecuador is showing to other countries that another world is possible!”
Mitch Anderson, Executive Director of Amazon Frontlines:
“In one fell swoop, the Ecuadorian people struck a mighty blow to the oil industry, protected one of the most biodiverse forests in the Amazon, and showed the world what grassroots climate action really looks like. People power is the answer to the climate crisis. A big question for me is where countries like the United States and the UK would land on a vote like this?”
It’s time to celebrate!!!!
People Power beat back Big Oil! #Ecuador has just become the first country in the world to halt oil drilling through direct climate democracy!
The results from yesterday’s historic referendum show that nearly 60% of the population voted in favor of protecting the Yasuní rainforest. By putting the choice over nasty extractive projects directly in the hands of the Ecuadorian people - and not in the hands of the politicians, which are lined with dirty oil money - we were able to achieve one of the most consequential climate victories over the fossil fuel industry!
Celebrate this historic moment by telling your friends and family! Thanks to the unity and incredible hard work of grassroots and Indigenous movements, we sent Big Oil packing! #YestoYasuní! #SiAlYasuní
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@alianzaceibo @conaie @confeniae @yasunidos