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Canadian oil company illegally bulldozes protected land in Africa  科技资讯
时间:2022-02-23   来源:[美国] Daily Climate
National Geographic Logo - HomeSkip to contentRenewSubscribeMenuThe Cuito River, here meandering through the highlands of Angola, eventually feeds into the Okavango Delta, a World Heritage Site, in Botswana. Conservationists fear that oil drilling in Namibia could pollute water sources communities depend on and foul the wildlife-rich delta itself.Photograph by CORY RICHARDSPlease be respectful of copyright. Unauthorized use is prohibited.EnvironmentWildlife WatchCanadian oil company illegally bulldozes protected land in Africa

Farms, water, and endangered wildlife are threatened as ReconAfrica expands its operations despite violations.

ByJeffrey Barbee andLaurel NemePublished February 23, 2022• 13 min readShareTweetEmail

Rundu, NamibiaOnce, the only marks on the ground in remote northeastern Namibia were the round, flat footprints of elephants; the cloven-hoofed spoor of giraffes, elands, sable antelopes, and cattle; and the tracks of a few four-wheel drive vehicles. 

Now, imprints of massive tractor tires and octagonal “thumper” plates used to locate oil and gas deposits scar the fragile landscape. The newly bulldozed roads are strewn with dead trees and bushes. A 280-mile-long seismic survey contracted by the Canadian petroleum exploration company ReconAfrica plowed through virgin forest and local croplands and widened existing roads—actions prohibited by the company’s seismic survey permit.

These are just the latest in a string of violations by ReconAfrica in the company’s controversial 14-month-long search for oil and gas in Namibia. On January 26, the Legal Assistance Centre, a Namibian human rights organization, filed a complaint with the country’s environment ministry on behalf of community members, demanding an investigation.

Six families told the Legal Assistance Centre that ReconAfrica representatives “entered their properties without permission, concluded seismic survey activities, and compelled them to sign papers without explaining their contents before leaving,” according to the complaint. It further alleges that people’s homes were damaged by the thumping and that the company’s surveyors cut “new roads in virgin territory without consulting local communities.”

     原文来源:https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/article/canadian-oil-company-illegally-bulldozes-protected-land-in-africa

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