The Guardian (USA)

‘We’ve been abandoned’: a decade later, Deepwater Horizon still haunts Mexico

- Nina Lakhani in Saladero, Veracruz

Erica Ríos Martínez grew-up in a riverside community filled with food and fiestas thanks to a booming fishing industry which supported tens of thousands of families across the Gulf of Mexico.

After high school, Ríos Martínez moved to a nearby town for college which she financed by selling blue crabs, shrimp and tilapia fished by her father in the Tamiahua lagoon – an elongated coastal inlet famed for its abundant shellfish.

But fish stocks began to decline in 2011 across the Gulf – the year after BP’s Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded 200 miles north of Mexican territory. The offshore rig sank and released almost 5m barrels of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico over 87 days. Oil plumes coated hundreds of miles of shoreline, causing catastroph­ic damage to marine life, coral reefs and birds.

Amid public and political outrage in the US, BP took full responsibi­lity for the worst oil spill of the 20th century, which killed 11 crew members and injured 17 others. The company has paid out $69bn, including more than $10bn to affected fishermen and businesses.

But BP denied the oil reached Mexico, claiming the ocean current propelled the huge spill in the opposite direction. However, fishermen and Mexican scientists knew this wasn’t true.

“Before the spill we had freezers full of fish. Afterwards, my father couldn’t catch enough to support me, no matter how many hours he spent fishing. It was the same for the whole community, and it has just got worse and worse,” said Ríos Martínez, 31, who was forced to drop out of university and move away.

Ten years later, Mexican communitie­s have not received a single cent in compensati­on.

“To claim the Gulf of Mexico ecosystem has borders is absurd, discrimina­tory and defies scientific knowledge,” said Eduardo Rubio, an expert in soil and water pollution at the College of Biologists.

Saladero is a picturesqu­e sleepy village situated on the bank of the Tancochin River which snakes into the south-westerly edge of the lagoon.

Before the BP disaster, 95% of the village made a living – directly or indirectly – from fishing in the lagoon which stretches 65 miles from Tampico, Tamaulipas to Tuxpan, Veracruz.

The lagoon was famous for prawns and oysters fishermen recall giving away because stocks were so abundant.

Now, youngsters are forced to migrate to find factory work in maquilasin faraway cities.

“The village is full of us old people, there’s nothing for the young here any more,” said Juan Mar Aran, 78, a fisherman for 60 years. “Before, we worked hard and had money in our pockets, now we depend on our children, even the dogs are skinny. It’s very unjust, we’ve been completely abandoned.”

In 2010, the Saladero fishing cooperativ­e registered 11,663kg of shrimp, 36kg of bass and 281,125kg of oysters. The decline has not been linear and publicly available official data is inconclusi­ve, but in 2019, the co-op registered only 1,000kg of shrimp, 20kg of bass, and no oysters.

“The American fishermen supported by President Obama were properly compensate­d whereas we’ve been mocked, humiliated and discrimina­ted against by British [Petroleum] … and let down by our own government. Ten years of struggle and nothing,” said Enrique Aran, 62, president of the cooperativ­e.

In Tamiahua, a small town across the lagoon, Eduviges Mendoza lit a cigarette on his small fishing boat, parked beside a row of wooden poles waiting for shrimp to fill his small net.

It’s dusk, and chilly as Mendoza, 53, settled in for a second consecutiv­e night on the lagoon with only a ratty blanket and a waterproof onesie for warmth. “There’s less fish, nobody can deny that. I’m lucky if I make enough to cover the petrol.”

Despite such sentiments BP has claimed that aerial images prove the oil spill’s impact was contained in US waters.

Yet back in 2011, Sergio Jiménez, a leading government oceanograp­her in Tamaulipas state, discovered the BP oil fingerprin­t more than 200 metres below sea level. Hydrocarbo­n fingerprin­ts, like human ones, are unique.

The oil from Deepwater Horizon was propelled south by the deep underwater current – distinct from the surface current, according to Jiménez, who in 2013 testified in a Louisiana court tasked with managing hundreds of claims against BP.

But the case was dismissed after the court ruled that Mexico’s lawsuit, filed by the then president, Enrique Peña Nieto, just days before the deadline, superseded individual state claims.

The case trundled along until in 2018, the Mexican government withdrew the lawsuit and settled the case for $25.5m – absolving BP from responsibi­lity for polluting Mexican waters. The secret deal, exposed in a joint investigat­ion by BuzzFeed and the transparen­cy group Poder, means the company no longer faces claims by any Mexican government entity.

Around the same time, the outgoing President Peña Nieto made several multimilli­on-dollar deals with BP. Hundreds of the company’s petrol stations have opened across the country.

Jiménez stands by his findings and a recent study by the University of Miami backed his research, concluding that the spread of oil was far greater and more catastroph­ic than previously thought, as satellites and aerial images failed to detect oil at lower concentrat­ions below the surface.

This “invisible oil” was substantia­l enough and toxic enough to destroy 50% of the marine life it encountere­d, according to Science.

In part, this is probably due to the unpreceden­ted quantities of toxic chemicals (dispersant­s) BP applied in order to stop visible oil plumes making landfall.

As a result, up to 40% of the leaked oil could still remain on the seabed. These “invisible oil” blocks will eventually break down and spread gradually over years – possibly decades – to come.

“It could take at least 20 to 25 years for the ecosystem to recover because of the deepwater contaminat­ion,” said the investigat­ive oceanograp­her Luis Soto.

But scientific study, like compensati­on, has been massively skewed.

In Mexico no long-term studies monitoring the impact of the spill and the dispersant­s have been conducted.

By contrast in the US, a research working group created by BP conducted more than 240 studies, which cost $1.3bn in less than five years after the spill. BP also set up a $500m, 10-year program to monitor US waters just over a month after the spill and aid to restore the ecosystem.

BP has not directly funded any studies or working groups in Mexico, but the battle for justice goes on.

In Mexico, a class-action lawsuit was launched against four BP subsidiari­es – two headquarte­red in Texas, two in Mexico – in December 2015, by an NGO working with pro bono lawyers specialisi­ng in environmen­tal disasters.

It took two years and several court orders to track down the correct addresses of the Mexican subsidiari­es in order to kickstart proceeding­s. Finally,

in September 2019, the lawsuit was authorised to proceed despite BP’s efforts to have it dismissed, but is currently on hold since BP appealed.

“BP’s pattern has been to deny everything, and claim the class action no merit, meanwhile settling many cases worth billions of dollars in the US. The position of BP is sad, but so is the position of the Mexican government which has ignored the plight of its own people,” said lawyer Karla Borja.

In 2019, Mexico’s new president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador (Amlo), promised the fishermen a fair deal. “Amlo promised to make the company pay. But so far we’ve seen nothing but nice words and meetings,” said Aran, the co-op president.

In Louisiana, more than 110 cases involving thousands of Mexicans remain open, but have yet to be heard. Scores more have been dismissed.

In March, the fishermen leading 41 of those cases wrote to the new CEO of BP, Bernard Looney, requesting he do the right thing and compensate the Mexicans affected by the oil spill.

In a statement BP said: “All available evidence confirms that oil from the Deepwater Horizon incident did not reach Mexican waters or shorelines … We value the opportunit­y to do business in Mexico, and we are committed to the highest standards of conduct and full compliance with the laws.”

In Saladero, shortly before the 10th anniversar­y of the disaster, about 150 people turned out for the town hallstyle meeting, to share stories of hardship resulting from the demise of the lagoon which has divided families and crushed educationa­l and career ambitions.

The primary school has fewer than 30 enrolled pupils, compared with more than a hundred before the spill. The only gas station shut down and abandoned boats dot the riverbank.

Numerous parents said they were forced to pull their children out of college so they could start work and send home remittance­s to support the family.

“There’s no money because there’s no fish, that’s why all our young people leave,” said Juana Constantin­o, 59, who cares for her grandson while her daughter works in a maquila in Reynosa, one of Mexico’s most dangerous border towns. “We need compensati­on, we want justice.”

To claim the Gulf of Mexico ecosystem has borders is absurd, discrimina­tory and defies scientific knowledge

Eduardo Rubio

 ??  ?? A merchant weighs shrimp while fishermen talk and arrive to sell product by the edge of a lagoon in Tamiahua, Veracruz, on 27 February. Photograph: Luis Antonio Rojas/The Guardian
A merchant weighs shrimp while fishermen talk and arrive to sell product by the edge of a lagoon in Tamiahua, Veracruz, on 27 February. Photograph: Luis Antonio Rojas/The Guardian
 ??  ?? Francisco Blanco Arango untangles a fishing with the help of her granddaugh­ter Ada Guadalupe Blanco while Kevin Blanco Flores plays with a dog at their backyard. Photograph: Luis Antonio Rojas/The Guardian
Francisco Blanco Arango untangles a fishing with the help of her granddaugh­ter Ada Guadalupe Blanco while Kevin Blanco Flores plays with a dog at their backyard. Photograph: Luis Antonio Rojas/The Guardian

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States