Press Release

09/09/04
Environmental Heroes Honored at 50th Annual ChevronTexaco Conservation Awards
Ceremony Marks Golden Anniversary of Prestigious Awards Founded by Acclaimed Outdoors Writer Ed Zern

SAN RAMON, Calif., Sep 9, 2004 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ -- The ChevronTexaco (NYSE: CVX) Conservation Awards, founded by the late outdoors humorist and author Ed Zern, today celebrated its 50th anniversary by honoring six environmental heroes, including the founder of an international program to protect primates, marine scientists who helped find treatments for cancer and a biologist who unraveled the mystery of breeding endangered rhinos in captivity.

"Ed Zern created the awards program to recognize those who were finding creative solutions to environmental challenges by bringing business and conservationists together," said Rhonda Zygocki, vice president of Health, Environment and Safety for ChevronTexaco. "Each of this year's winners underscores the power of such partnerships."

The winners, each selected by an independent panel of leading conservationists, were honored at ceremonies at ChevronTexaco's global headquarters in San Ramon, California. Each received a $10,000 cash prize. Since its founding in 1954, the ChevronTexaco Conservation Awards have honored more than 1,000 volunteers, professionals and organizations for their practical and creative solutions to environmental challenges.

    The 2004 ChevronTexaco Conservation Award honorees are:

    -- Dr. Harry Butler, conservationist, Willetton, Western Australia.
       Dr. Butler's 1970s television series, In the Wild, made many
       Australians aware for the first time of the country's wildlife heritage
       and the need to conserve it.  He also is credited for helping to
       maintain the ecological integrity of significant areas throughout
       Australia; this includes his work with the oil and gas industry off the
       country's northwest coast.  Dr. Butler's environmental management model
       has been widely adopted by government and industry in Australia and
       internationally.  His efforts directly help protect thousands of plant
       and animal species.
    -- Dale Harris, the Great Burn Study Group, Missoula, Montana.  For
       30 years, Harris has worked both professionally and as a volunteer to
       protect wild places, including a 300,000-acre area known as the Great
       Burn, which borders Montana and Idaho.  This area still bears the
       effects of a 1910 fire, the largest in recorded history, in which
       millions of acres of forest burned in just a few days.  Harris
       co-founded the Great Burn Study Group, which has campaigned for U.S.
       Congress to designate the area as a national wilderness.
    -- Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratory (GSML), Panacea, Florida.  The
       nonprofit GSML's unique research, educational, marine protection and a
       myriad of other programs provide a variety of benefits to scientific
       and medical research.  Founded in 1963 by Jack and Anne Rudloe, GSML
       facilities house hundreds of species of local marine life used in
       educational and research programs in universities, aquariums and
       museums throughout the world.  In 2003, a compound found in one Gulf of
       Mexico specimen that GSML provided to the National Cancer Institute
       received clinical approval for use as a treatment of esophageal cancer.
       GSML's animals have flown in the space shuttle in order to help NASA
       study weightlessness.  Other species are used in pollution research.
       Each year, more 16,000 students visit GSML's 30,000-gallon aquarium to
       see, touch and learn about species of marine fish, sea turtles and
       invertebrates from the gulf.  Also, since the 1970s, GSML has been
       active in protecting coastal wetlands, sea turtles, marine resources
       and public lands.
    -- LightHawk, Lander, Wyoming.  With more than 120 pilots, the nonprofit
       LightHawk is the oldest and largest volunteer-based environmental
       aviation organization in the world, having sponsored thousands of
       flights in support of diverse environmental efforts throughout the
       Americas.  Flights monitor manatee, whale shark and water bird
       populations.  Aerial monitoring tracks logging from Alaska to Panama,
       conservation easements in New England and energy development in the
       Rockies.  Urban flights help passengers envision healthy watersheds and
       gain perspective on groundwater management.  LightHawk supports the
       work of more than 130 partners annually, which include community
       groups, large environmental networks and international organizations.
    -- Dr. Shirley McGreal, International Primate Protection League (IPPL),
       Summerville, South Carolina.  McGreal founded IPPL in 1973 to fight the
       illegal capture, sale and transport of primates.  Since then, she has
       built and coordinates an international network with 17,000 members,
       31 field representatives and 26 advisers dedicated to protecting
       gorillas, orangutans, gibbons, monkeys and other primates.  From Africa
       and Asia to the United States, McGreal works with and supports
       conservationists, grassroots animal-protection groups and primate
       rescue centers.  At IPPL's headquarters outside Summerville, she
       operates a 10-acre sanctuary for primates.  Her magazine, IPPL News,
       also plays an important role in educating readers in more than
       50 countries about action that can be taken to protect primates.
    -- Dr. Terri Roth, Cincinnati Zoo Lindner Center for Conservation and
       Research of Endangered Wildlife, Cincinnati, Ohio.  With the Sumatran
       rhinoceros on the brink of extinction, Roth's efforts led to the first
       of the species to be bred and born in captivity in 112 years.  She
       discovered that female Sumatran rhinos ovulate only after mating, and
       thus determined when the rhinos could be paired for breeding without
       fighting.  Solving this mystery resulted in successful captive-breeding
       protocol for Sumatran rhinos.  Because of habitat destruction and
       poaching, fewer than 300 Sumatran rhinos remain globally, mainly in the
       forests of Malaysia and in Sumatra, the largest island of Indonesia.
       Roth's efforts to save the Sumatran rhino from extinction are a
       celebration of science, institutional collaboration and international
       partnerships.

Though founder Ed Zern died in 1994, his belief in the power of collaboration remains the program's cornerstone.

"Ed had this idea about the awards at a time when conservation was a hard thing to talk about," said Helen Engle, longtime director on the National Audubon Society's board. "And he knew intuitively that nothing would be achieved unless we built partnerships."

Currently celebrating its 125th anniversary, ChevronTexaco is one of the world's leading energy companies. With more than 50,000 employees, ChevronTexaco conducts business in approximately 180 countries around the world, producing and transporting crude oil and natural gas, and marketing and distributing fuels and other energy products. ChevronTexaco is based in San Ramon, Calif. More information on ChevronTexaco is available at www.chevrontexaco.com

SOURCE ChevronTexaco

Camille Costello, +1-925-842-2583, or Peter Bartelme,
+1-925-842-2590, both of ChevronTexaco
http://www.chevrontexaco.com