An international arbitration tribunal has ruled in favor of Chevron Corporation in a claim against Ecuador related to past oil operations by Chevron’s subsidiary, Texaco Petroleum Company. The tribunal, administered by the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, found that Ecuador’s courts violated international law through their delays in ruling on certain commercial disputes [...]
Chevron Wins Arbitration Claim Against Ecuador (Update)
March 30th, 2010 · 1 Comment
Tags: · bilateral investment treaty, chevron, chevron corporation, Chevron Wins Arbitration Claim Against Ecuador, ecuador, ecuador's courts, ecuadoran courts, foreign investors, hewitt pate, lago agrio, permanent court of arbitration, president rafael correa, rafael correa, rule of law, san ramon, texaco, texaco petroleum company, the hague
Answers Reveal Much About McCain, Obama
September 26th, 2008 · 2 Comments
Partnership for a Secure America, a group that recently gave the U.S. Government a “C” grade for its efforts to prevent a nuclear, chemical or biological terror attack on America, used a news release this morning to raise five questions (below) for Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain to answer. Those questions appear below, [...]
Tags: · alternative fuels, america's global leadership, Barack Obama, biological, chemical, China, coal, Democrat, emissions reduction policies, energy efficiency, fair trade, Foreign Policy, Human Rights, hybrid, infrastructure, international cooperation, John McCain, McCain, National Security, natural gas, NBC, nuclear, Obama, Olympics, partnership for a secure america, policy positions, public schools, Republican, rule of law, Solar, terror attack, tire-pressure guage, u.n. approval, u.s. government, UN, United Nations, wind









































