The roar of the burning gas well could be heard almost a mile and a half
away, from atop the high plateau where Albino Campo Maripe stood, looking down
at the orange flames lapping the earth in the distance.
When
he was a child, the 60-year-old Mapuche chief used to ride there bareback.
Those days are gone forever. The once-pristine landscape is now dotted with
fracking wells and the white patches of land cleared for even more.
The panoramic view is nonetheless overpowering. Two crystal-blue lakes,
whose far shores blend with the horizon, cling to the edge of an arid and
wind-buffeted Martian landscape of red sandstone, rugged promontories and wide
beaches.
The ancient and spectacular rock formations of Neuquén province in Argentina’s Patagonia region are a paleontologist’s dream, rich with dinosaur fossils. But the image quickly fades to the sight and sound of the fracking well that exploded on 14 September and burned continuously for 24 days, spewing hot gas and other elements into the air from nearly two miles below ground.
The ancient and spectacular rock formations of Neuquén province in Argentina’s Patagonia region are a paleontologist’s dream, rich with dinosaur fossils. But the image quickly fades to the sight and sound of the fracking well that exploded on 14 September and burned continuously for 24 days, spewing hot gas and other elements into the air from nearly two miles below ground.
The raging fire was
finally put out on Monday by a team
of experts who flew from Houston with 56 tons of special equipment. “This
shouldn’t be happening,” Campo Maripe said, “but these are the consequences of
fracking.”
Fracking accidents happen regularly in Vaca Muerta (Dead Cow in
Spanish), one of the world’s largest shale oil and gas reservoirs. In 2018
alone, there were an estimated 934
incidents at 95 wells.
There
have been leaks from drilling sites, and claims from local people of water
pollution and increased ill health affecting them and their livestock.
For
Argentina’s leaders there is a bigger picture. They believe the shale reservoir
can rescue the country from its ongoing economic crises.
“This
province will transform us into a world power,” the president, Mauricio Macri,
said on Tuesday to a crowd of 3,000 people in Neuquén, referring to the nearly
2,000 fracking wells that have been drilled there since the discovery of the
deposits was announced in 2011.
Twenty
companies own a total of 36 concessions in Vaca Muerta, covering a combined
area of about 8,500 sq km (3,300 sq miles).
The
Argentine oil company YPF leads the pack with 23 areas, of which 16 are
operational, in partnership with the US firm Chevron.
For the environmentalist Maristella Svampa, the
promise that Vaca Muerta could turn Argentina into a new Saudi Arabia is a myth, like that of
El Dorado, the city of gold the Spanish conquistadors searched for in South
America. “It’s the magical illusion of sudden wealth,” she said.
Neuquén’s indigenous Mapuche people claim Vaca Muerta has brought them not
wealth, but discrimination, dispossession and health problems.
The Campo Maripe community, comprising about 125
people among 35 families, is one of more than 40 Mapuche communities in
Neuquén.
“When we went to school the other students would yell:
‘Here come the Indians,’” says Mabel Campo Maripe, 52, who shares community
chief duties with her brother Albino. “Those same people today refuse to accept
we are Mapuches because that would give us a right to our land.”
They say the denial of their cultural identity is
being used by the Neuquén authorities to refuse the Campo Maripe community
legal rights over the Loma Campana plateau, where they say they have grazed
their cattle and goats for nearly a century. Pockmarked with close to 500
fracking wells that have sprung up in the past seven years, the plateau is the
centre of the fracking boom.
Summer temperatures reach 40C (104F); in winter they
dip to -14C. There are no trees, only sparse shrubs that provide subsistence
pasture for the cattle and goats of the Campo Maripe community.
“The oil companies entered our land without our
permission,” claims the elder Campo Maripe. The fracking wells took a quick
toll on their animals, he says. “We had goats born without jaws, without
mouths.”
In 2014, the community began blocking the access road
used by oil company trucks to reach the Loma Campana plateau. “First we blocked
the road for two weeks, then for 48 days and then again for another 48 days,”
says Campo Maripe.
They occupied fracking towers and even the YPF offices
in the capital city of Neuquén. Finally, an agreement was reached for a special
committee, consisting of government and Mapuche-appointed experts, to determine
the community’s claim on about 17,000 hectares (42,000 acres) in and around
Loma Campana.
“We were able to determine that the Campo Maripe clan
has occupied the land continually since at least 1927, when they started paying
pasture rights to the national government,” said Jorgelina Villarreal, an
anthropologist who formed part of the committee. “We found government records,
even an army map, that show they were the first recorded settlers of Loma
Campana.”
But in 2015, the authorities refused to accept the
committee’s findings. The then governor Jorge Sapag said the report failed to
prove the community had inhabited the area in the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries
and therefore their claim to the plateau was invalid. He said: “The plateau
belongs to the province.”
Villareal said: “His reasoning is ridiculous.
Argentina didn’t even exist in the 17th and 18th centuries, but the Mapuches
were already here.” The authorities offered the clan the title deed to a mere
700 hectares. The offer was refused.
Oil companies say they are trying to work with the indigenous
communities but YPF pointed to the 2015 ruling and reiterated: “Campo Maripe
has never inhabited the extensive land they are claiming for.”
A spokesman said: “Their houses and cultural or
productive activities are several kilometres away from YPF and Chevron’s
operations. Nevertheless, the community still claims they should have rights on
the lands where YPF and Chevron operate.”
The oil companies say their work does not contaminate
water sources because it occurs 3,000 metres (9,850ft) below ground, while the
water tables are at a depth of only 200 metres.
But Campo Maripe claims the problem is not seepage
from below, but from above. “They drilled about 400 wells contaminating
everything. They dug pits next to the wells where they dumped the waste without
any treatment and threw limestone on it to cover it up. We lost our best land.”
Albino, Mabel and other family members say they have
suffered a multitude of health problems since the fracking began.
“One of our sisters and her husband died of cancer in
2017,” says Mabel. “The fracking has affected our bones, which become
decalcified. I had to have a titanium spine implant; another sister also needs
one. Albino had an operation on his arm because of bone loss.”
Both siblings claim doctors have privately told them
the cause is contamination from the wells. “They are scared to talk,” says
Mabel. She says one worried doctor asked her: “Are you recording me?”
“Last year, the grandson of another sister was born
with his intestines outside his body. They had to operate [on] him to put them
in,” says Mabel.
Then there are the permanent headaches, and the smell.
On hot, windy days the fields smell like a petrol station.
The Guardian asked YPF about the fears of contamination and possible
health impacts, including claims of cancer, respiratory ailments and skin
lesions. It denied there was a problem.
“At
YPF we are committed to operate with the highest standards. Operational
excellence is key and we work permanently to improve and implement solutions
that minimise the potential impacts that our activity could generate,” it said.
“In the special case of Loma Campana, the area we develop in partnership with
Chevron, no incidents of any kind have been recorded since the beginning of
operations in 2013.”
The
arrival of waste disposal contractors has brought a separate set of problems. A
Greenpeace team took samples from the open-air waste pits on Loma Campana and
released the results to the Mapuche Confederation of Neuquén, which last
October opened a lawsuit against the Treater waste disposal plant, alleging
that Treater had handled waste for many of the fossil fuel companies mining in
the area.
“We
are concerned about leakage from the waste pits into the ground as well as by
the wind carrying volatile particles into the air from the mountains of waste
above the pools,” says Natalia Machain, executive director of Greenpeace
Argentina, which joined the lawsuit as plaintiff this year.
Treater has denied any contamination. “We are not a waste dump. We are
an environmental services company that treats waste from the oil industry.”
But
the Neuquén legislator Santiago Nogueira is pressing for waste management laws
because, he says, “the province does not have enough capacity to process the
amount of waste generated by Vaca Muerta”.
Treater
is only one of many open-air waste pits dotted across Vaca Muerta. A large
mound rises above the Comarsa waste plant about 4 miles (6km) outside Neuquén.
Closed by the authorities because of its proximity to a large urban area, the
plant no longer receives waste, but bulldozers are constantly at work turning
over the mounds of earth on its grounds.
Sections
of the cement containment wall around the plant have collapsed.
“There
are over 300,000 cubic metres of waste still piled at Comarsa,” said Nogueira.
“The whole waste treatment system is insufficient.”
Vaca Muerta has yet to prove its economic viability. Experts say the
government’s expectations are hampered by the high cost of fracking in
Argentina and the lack of adequate gas transport and waste disposal
infrastructure, aggravated by a shaky economy.
The
country has spent billions of dollars in direct handouts to lure
investors. “Oil companies aren’t extracting hydrocarbons from Vaca Muerta.
They’re extracting subsidies,” says Enrique Viale, an environmental lawyer and anti-fracking
campaigner.
The
subsidies are ultimately unaffordable for Argentina, according to a report released in March by the Cleveland-based Institute for Energy
Economics and Financial Analysis.
In
January the International Monetary Fund, which had put together a $57bn bailout
for Argentina in 2018, demanded a trimming of the subsidies. The industry
responded with layoffs, the threat of lawsuits against the government and
production cuts. “The abrupt reduction in Argentina’s production subsidy
programme … is shaking investor confidence,” the report states.
However
grim the outlook for the oil and gas companies, it is the Mapuche indigenous
people who are bearing the highest cost for Argentina’s dream of a fracking
bonanza.
“As
Mapuches, we’re not fighting for just ourselves or our community,” says Albino
Campo Maripe. “We want our children and grandchildren to know that we fought
for something that belongs to everyone. Water is life. Every plant is life. The
greed of governments is killing the world. The world is not going to end. We
are going to end, because we’re killing ourselves.”
Article by Uki
Goñi
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