Posted by Angela Glienicke — 27 July 2016 at 1:59pm
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Every year on the 29th
July the largest members of the
cat family have their special day which raises awareness and celebrates these
iconic animals. It’s estimated that fewer than 4,000 tigers are left in the wild
with almost 93% of their historic range being lost.
Posted by jossc — 21 December 2009 at 12:16pm
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Two years have passed since world leaders promised all of us a deal to stop climate change. After two weeks of UN negotiations, politicians breezed in, had dinner with the Queen and then failed to deliver any meaningful action on climate change.
As we all try to come to terms with the historic failure of nerve and vision that paralysed the Copenhagen climate summit, the response of Greenpeace members around the world has been fast and focused: expressing their condemnation of world leaders unwilling or unable to lead in a time of crisis, and demanding the release of the four Greenpeace activists who face spending Christmas in jail after making a peaceful protest at the Danish Queen's dinner for Heads of State.
Copenhagen
Over 100 Greenpeace staff and supporters held a candle-lit vigil outside Vestre Fængsel prison, Copenhagen, where four of our activists face spending Christmas in jail - held in isolation and without trial. Three of them took part in the peaceful protest at the Danish Queen's Heads of State dinner during the Copenhagen Climate Summit.
Posted by jossc — 7 August 2009 at 11:04am
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More breathtaking images just in from Nick Cobbing, aboard the Arctic Sunrise in Greenland, where the crew are working with leading climate scientists to monitor the break-up of the Petermann Glacier.
Posted by jamie — 15 July 2009 at 2:37pm
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The Arctic Sunrise is still in Greenland where the crew (including leading climate scientists and other ice experts) have been monitoring the ongoing disintegration of the Petermann glacier.
Photographer Nick Cobbing is on board, and we've all been oohing and aahing over his stunning images as they come in to the office. They're all the more poignant as the portion of the glacier they depict may soon cease to exist.
Posted by jamie — 30 June 2009 at 5:42pm
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There are a lot of tired but very happy (not
to mention sun-kissed) people around the office today. Those who manned the
Greenpeace field at Glastonbury
are reappearing and they have such tales to tell. (I would have asked one of them to write this update, but they're all worn out.)
Posted by jossc — 12 June 2009 at 4:36pm
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May's round up of images from around the Greenpeace world come from as far afield as Australia, where activists shut down a giant digger at the most polluting power station in the developed world; India, where we've been installing solar panels in schools; and Thailand, where volunteers canoed 350km to document the toxic damage being done to the Chao Praya, the country's most iconic river.
Posted by jamie — 8 June 2009 at 1:55pm
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In a new photo essay, rice farming in southern China is put under the spotlight to show how traditional methods are still working well without any tinkering from the GM industry.