reports

Radiological impact of Spent Fuel Management options

Last edited 31 March 2000 at 9:00am
Publication date: 
22 August, 1999

Part four of the seven part document prepared as a PDF.

Download the report:

Radiological impact of Spent Fuel Management options

Last edited 31 March 2000 at 9:00am
Publication date: 
31 August, 1999

Part three of the seven part document prepared as a PDF

Download the report:

Radiological impact of Spent Fuel Management options

Last edited 31 March 2000 at 9:00am
Publication date: 
31 August, 1999

Publication date: August 1999

Summary
Part two of the seven part document prepared as a PDF

Download the report:

Radiological impact of Spent Fuel Management Options

Last edited 31 March 2000 at 9:00am
Publication date: 
31 August, 1999

Part one of the seven part document prepared as a PDF.

Download the report:

Radiological impact of Spent Fuel Management options

Last edited 31 March 2000 at 9:00am
Publication date: 
31 August, 1999

Part seven of the seven part document prepared as a PDF.

Download the report:

Radiological impact of Spent Fuel Management options

Last edited 31 March 2000 at 9:00am
Publication date: 
31 August, 1999

Part six of the seven part document prepared as a PDF

Download the report:

Radiological impact of Spent Fuel Management options

Last edited 31 March 2000 at 9:00am
Publication date: 
31 August, 1999

Part five of the seven part document prepared as a PDF.

Download the report:

Atlantic Frontier: legal

Last edited 24 March 2000 at 9:00am

In November 1999 Greenpeace secured a landmark High Court ruling that the government's oil licensing policy is illegal, and must immediately stop, until the long-term survival of the Atlantic Frontier's wildlife is secured. Greenpeace proved that the government was breaking European Law by failing to protect the areas whales and dolphins under the EU Habitats Directive.

Whales and CITES

Last edited 23 March 2000 at 9:00am
Publication date: 
23 March, 2001

Greenpeace briefing

Download the report:

Japan pushes commercial whaling into the new Millennium

Last edited 23 March 2000 at 9:00am
Publication date: 
29 December, 2000

Commercial whaling has decimated whale population after whale population. The development of new technology in the first part of the twentieth century, such as the introduction in 1925 of the first factory ship, enabled the whaling nations to hunt whales in the vast seas that surround Antarctica. The same pattern of destructive over-exploitation that characterises all commercial whaling operations occurred in these Southern Oceans. It has been estimated that in the fifty years from 1925-1975 over 1.5 million whales were killed in total, the majority of these in Antarctic waters.

Download the report:

Follow Greenpeace UK