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January 9, 2007 - 9 de Enero del 2007
Yasuní Rainforest Campaign News Story
President Palacio Decrees Boundaries of Intangible Zone:

Ecuador Creates 2 Million Acre Amazonian "Intangible Zone
to Protect Uncontacted Groups

Presidente Palacio Decreto límites de la zona intangible

 

President Palacio Declares Intangible Zone in Yasuní

Yasuní Rainforest Campaign/Save America's Forests News Story
January 9, 2007

Ecuador Creates 2 Million Acre Amazonian Intangible Zone to Protect Uncontacted Groups

The Ecuadorian government, via Presidential Decree, delimited a nearly 2 million acre Intangible Zone in an oil-rich region of the Amazon last week. Oil extraction, as well as logging, is permanently prohibited within the zone.

The Intangible Zone, larger than the state of Delaware, is designed to protect the core territory of the Tagaeri and Taromenane, the last two known groups of indigenous peoples in voluntary isolation in Ecuador. The Intangible Zone is located in the heart of the Ecuadorian Amazon and overlaps the southern part of Yasuni National Park, which despite its park status is open to oil development.

Both the Tagaeri and Taromenane are renowned for their giant spears and regarded as amongst the fiercest tribes on Earth. There is a bloody history of encounters between these two groups and invading oil company workers, loggers, and colonists.

The Yasuni National Park region is widely recognized by scientists as one of the most biodiverse on Earth.

“The signing of this Decree is a hard-fought victory in favor of the protection of peoples in voluntary isolation,” stated Eduardo Pichilingue of the Ecuadorian NGO EcoCiencia, in reference to the long, difficult process of finalizing the Intangible Zone.

The Intangible Zone was initially created in 1999, but it took the past 8 years to actually define the zone’s controversial boundaries, which are surrounded by untapped oil fields.

The Presidential Decree, in addition to prohibiting the extraction of oil within the Intangible Zone, also establishes a 10-km surrounding buffer zone where the construction of oil access roads is prohibited, but oil extraction is permitted.

The Decree also prohibits logging within the Intangible Zone

Illegal logging in the region has escalated in recent years, leading to deadly confrontations between loggers and the Tagaeri-Taromenane. The government was recently warned by human rights advocates that illegal logging camps were operating within four kilometers of Taromenane houses spotted from aerial flights.

A logger was speared to death by the Taromenane as recently as April 2006, and in 2005 another logger was found dead with over 30 spears through his body.

“Putting such a massive area off-limits to oil extraction and roads in a potentially oil-rich area is a major step towards protecting the Tagaeri-Taromenane and the extraordinary biodiversity of Yasuni,” stated Matt Finer of Save America’s Forests. “The problem is that the northern part of the park is still getting hammered by oil projects.”

Petrobras (the Brazilian national oil company) and Andes Petroleum (a partnership between two Chinese state oil companies, CNPC and Sinopec) both have active concessions within Yasuni National Park, just north of the Intangible Zone.

Moreover, the largest untapped oil reserves in the country—over a billion barrels located in an area known as the ITT Block—also lie within Yasuni National Park just north of the Intangible Zone.

One of the most significant details of the Decree is that it includes a large oil field, known as Awant, within the boundaries of the Intangible Zone, which now places it off-limits to extraction.

Andes Petroleum, which earlier in 2006 purchased the oil rights to develop the block that contains Awant, had been pressuring the government to alter the limits of the Zone to allow extraction of this field. International and Ecuadorian NGOs, however, successfully pressured the government to maintain Awant within the Zone’s boundaries, citing evidence that the Taromenane were living very close to this area.

Of the five known oil fields of the southern Yasuni region, two were included within the Intangible Zone, however three remain just outside the limits of the Zone, within the buffer area.

“Given the realities of Ecuador—that is, the government’s drive to open up the entire Amazon to oil—the Intangible Zone could be the only true refuge for the Tagaeri and Taromenane” stated Fernando Ponce of the Ecuadorian watchdog group, Citizens for Democracy. “However, to fully protect the isolated peoples, Ecuador needs to develop economic alternatives and stop oil exploitation in all of Yasuni National Park and Huaorani Territory.”

The powerful indigenous organization that represents all of Ecuador’s indigenous Nationalities, CONAIE, strongly opposed the delimitation of the Intangible Zone because it leaves the northern part of Yasuní open to oil development.

In a letter to Ecuador’s President in September, CONAIE argued that there should be a “moratorium on oil exploitation in all 5 millionacres of ancestral Huaorani Territory.”

The Huaorani have previously called for a 10-year moratorium on new oil activities within their ancestral territory, which includes all of Yasuni National Park.

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