Ecuadorian oil: indigenous communities defend their land

Ecuador oil referendum: Waorani of Yasuni reserve determined to resist oil development. Armed with blowpipes and conviction, they are mobilizing to protect their territory and preserve the biodiversity of the Ecuadorian Amazon.

Share:

Comprehensive energy news coverage, updated nonstop

Annual subscription

8.25$/month*

*billed annually at 99$/year for the first year then 149,00$/year ​

Unlimited access • Archives included • Professional invoice

OTHER ACCESS OPTIONS

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2$/month*
then 14.90$ per month thereafter

FREE ACCOUNT

3 articles offered per month

FREE

*Prices are excluding VAT, which may vary depending on your location or professional status

Since 2021: 35,000 articles • 150+ analyses per week

“The jungle is my home, and I don’t want foreigners coming into my territory”.

Armed with a long blowpipe and dangerous curare-soaked darts, Kominta is ready to fight the oil companies that exploit and covet the Ecuadorian Amazon.

Ecuador oil referendum: The fate of the Yasuni reserve at stake

Like his nomadic ancestors, this old Waorani hunter lives virtually naked in a village of 200 souls in the Yasuni nature reserve in Ecuador’s Amazonian northeast. On August 20, during general elections, a nationwide referendum will be held to decide whether to continue oil production in part of this park, whose million hectares of rainforest are a world biodiversity reserve. – Live free! – The inhabitants of the village of Bameno, on the banks of the Cononaco river (in the province of Pastaza, bordering Peru), have apparently already chosen their side:

“I don’t want an oil company on my land. This is how I want to live, freely, in a healthy place”, proclaims the old Kominta in his native language (wao terere).

The environmental group “Yasunidos” has been calling for this national consultation for ten years. Last May, the country’s highest court finally authorized it. It will have to decide on the future of the Ishpingo, Tambococha and Tiputini (ITT) block, known as “Block 43”, which is located in Yasuni Park and contributes to the extraction of 12% of the 466,000 barrels/day produced in Ecuador. The government opposes this consultation, estimating losses of $16.47 billion over 20 years if the block is revoked.

The Waorani, guardians of Yasuni, rise up against black gold

The indigenous Waorani tribe, numbering some 4,800 members and owning around 800,000 hectares in the Amazonian provinces of Orellana, Pastaza and Napo, is divided on the issue. Some support the oil companies, others reject them, as in Bameno, spared from hydrocarbon exploitation for the time being. The Ecuadorian Constitution recognizes indigenous peoples’ “collective ownership of land, as an ancestral form of territorial organization”. However, it maintains the State’s power over the subsoil.

The oil industry is “destroying the environment where I live”, says the old hunter, whose words are translated by Elisa Enqueri, a young Wao woman visiting Bameno on a family trip, accompanied by a group of journalists including AFP. – “Ever more abrupt” – It takes almost 12 hours by pirogue over several rivers to reach the village.

“My grandmother says she’s going to take her spear. She has the energy and still feels young (…) to forbid foreigners to come,” explains Elisa, an activist in defense of Yasuni Park, home to two tribes related to the Wao who remain voluntarily isolated.

Bloody conflicts and the risk of ethnocide in the face of oil intrusion

The Taromenane and Tagaeri avoid contact with outsiders, are rivals and regularly engage in bloody clashes. They have already attacked oil workers and lumberjacks with spears.

Oil activity “affects their way of life and puts their lives in danger. There is a serious risk of ethnocide, of total extermination of these communities”, Pedro Bermeo, a lawyer and spokesman for “Yasunidos”, an environmental group behind the request for the ITT referendum, told AFP in Bameno.

The private San Francisco University in Quito has identified 2,000 species of tree, 610 species of bird, 204 species of mammal, 150 species of amphibian, 121 species of reptile and 100,000 species of arthropod in the theoretically protected Yasuni reserve. Moi Guiquita, another young Wao, claims that “every time” oil companies enter Yasuni, where deposits other than ITT are currently being exploited, the impact has been “more abrupt”.

“60 years ago they were much further away, but they’re getting closer and closer” to Bameno. Faced with the advance of oil activity and extractivism, “we have nowhere left to go”, warns the young man.

BOURBON will provide maritime services to ExxonMobil Guyana for five years starting in 2026, marking a key step in the logistical development of the Guyanese offshore basin.
Viridien has launched a 4,300 sq km seismic reimaging programme over Angola’s offshore block 22 to support the country’s upcoming licensing round in the Kwanza Basin.
Shell restructures its stake in the Caspian pipeline by exiting the joint venture with Rosneft, with Kremlin approval, to comply with sanctions while maintaining access to Kazakh crude.
Shell acquires 60% of Block 2C in the Orange Basin, commits to drilling three wells and paying a $25mn signing bonus to PetroSA, pending regulatory approval in South Africa.
Malgré la pression exercée sur le gouvernement vénézuélien, Washington ne cherche pas à exclure Caracas de l’OPEP, misant sur une influence indirecte au sein du cartel pour défendre ses intérêts énergétiques.
Kazakhstan redirects part of its oil production to China following the drone attack on the Caspian Pipeline Consortium terminal, without a full export halt.
US investment bank Xtellus Partners has submitted a plan to the US Treasury to recover frozen Lukoil holdings for investors by selling the Russian company’s international assets.
Ghanaian company Cybele Energy has signed a $17mn exploration deal in Guyana’s shallow offshore waters, targeting a block estimated to contain 400 million barrels and located outside disputed territorial zones.
Oil prices moved little after a drop linked to the restart of a major Iraqi oilfield, while investors remained focused on Ukraine peace negotiations and an upcoming monetary policy decision in the United States.
TechnipFMC will design and install flexible pipes for Ithaca Energy as part of the development of the Captain oil field, strengthening its footprint in the UK offshore sector.
Vaalco Energy has started drilling the ET-15 well on the Etame platform, marking the beginning of phase three of its offshore development programme in Gabon, supported by a contract with Borr Drilling.
The attack on a key Caspian Pipeline Consortium offshore facility in the Black Sea halves Kazakhstan’s crude exports, exposing oil majors and reshaping regional energy dynamics.
Iraq is preparing a managed transition at the West Qurna-2 oil field, following US sanctions against Lukoil, by prioritising a transfer to players deemed reliable by Washington, including ExxonMobil.
The Rapid Support Forces have taken Heglig, Sudan’s largest oil site, halting production and increasing risks to regional crude export flows.
The rehabilitation cost of Sonara, Cameroon’s only refinery, has now reached XAF300bn (USD533mn), with several international banks showing growing interest in financing the project.
China imported 12.38 million barrels per day in November, the highest level since August 2023, driven by stronger refining margins and anticipation of 2026 quotas.
The United States reaffirmed its military commitment to Guyana, effectively securing access to its rapidly expanding oil production amid persistent border tensions with Venezuela.
Sanctioned tanker Kairos, abandoned after a Ukrainian drone attack, ran aground off Bulgaria’s coast, exposing growing legal and operational risks tied to Russia’s shadow fleet in the Black Sea.
The United States is temporarily licensing Lukoil’s operations outside Russia, blocking all financial flows to Moscow while facilitating the supervised sale of a portfolio valued at $22bn, without disrupting supply for allied countries.
Libya’s state oil firm NOC plans to launch a licensing round for 20 blocks in early 2026, amid mounting legal, political and financial uncertainties for international investors.

All the latest energy news, all the time

Annual subscription

8.25$/month*

*billed annually at 99$/year for the first year then 149,00$/year ​

Unlimited access - Archives included - Pro invoice

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2$/month*
then 14.90$ per month thereafter

*Prices shown are exclusive of VAT, which may vary according to your location or professional status.

Since 2021: 30,000 articles - +150 analyses/week.