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Oil, Illness,
and Human Rights
Petroleum, or oil, is part of many products used every day, such as gasoline,
propane, kerosene, heating oil, and asphalt, as well as many plastics, paints,
pesticides, solvents, and cosmetics. Even some clothes and medicines are
made from oil. But oil is toxic and has harmful effects on our health and the
environment, starting with the methods used to find it, transport it, and
refine it, as well as the ways in which it is then used.
People in oil-rich areas hope that oil will bring wealth. But in most cases,
the wealth goes to the oil companies while the people in the communities
are left with poverty, pollution, sickness, and the violence that seems to spill
over wherever oil is found. Because the world economy depends on oil, the oil
industry has the power to influence governments and international policies.
This often leaves poor people in oil-rich communities struggling to protect
themselves and their land, and people in wealthy or developing communities
struggling with air pollution.
Oil, coal, and natural gas are fossil fuels. They are made from the remains
of plants and animals that died millions of years ago, and there is only a
limited amount of them. In the past 100 years, oil has become the main
energy source for most of the world. Now, much of the world’s oil resources
have been used up. Burning so much oil and other fossil fuels has led to global
warming (see page 33), one of the biggest environmental problems facing the
world today. More and more, people around the world are calling for an end
to the oil economy and for the development of cleaner and more sustainable
forms of energy (see Chapter 23).