Posted by mollybrooks — 10 May 2011 at 12:12pm
-
Comments
Thanks to your generous support, we have been successful in our mission to give Paula a new home after leaving the National Theatre. She has just arrived in her new home and has been busy meeting the locals and finding her way around, before she embarks on an intensive training course to bring her up to speed on our climate campaign. Stay tuned to find out what adventures she'll be taking part in next...
Posted by Louise Edge — 10 February 2011 at 5:28pm
-
Comments
Yesterday the Guardian featured a series of
pictures showing the appalling impact that China’s growing textile industry is having on the
Pearl River delta.
Posted by jamie — 22 October 2010 at 10:39am
-
Comments
Take a look at this audio slideshow produced by photographer Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert and our very own Bex Sumner, both currently in Indonesia. It features our international exective director Kumi Naidoo and US forest campaigner Rolf Skar who've been witnessing the devastation in Sumatra for themselves, where plantations are replacing the rainforests at a rate of knots.
Posted by jamie — 15 September 2010 at 4:42pm
-
Comments
If you're on London's South Bank over the next few weeks, watch out for a new open air exhibition featuring the work of regular Greenpeace photographer Jiri Rezac. He's been to the tar sands works in Canada and the images he's brought back clearly show the extent of the devastation caused by this insane venture to both the environment and local populations.
The slideshow above is just a taste of Jiri's work featured in the exhibition which you can see near City Hall by Tower Bridge until 14 October. It will then be touring around the UK - details are still to be confirmed but check the Tarnished Earth website for updates.
Posted by jamie — 20 August 2010 at 8:01pm
-
Comments
Will Rose, the Esperanza's photographer, has been keeping himself busy documenting life on board the ship as well as some of the incredible sights the crew have already encountered on their journey north. They've seen whales, the Northern Lights and the Persaid meteor shower. Not that I'm jealous.
Posted by jamie — 5 August 2010 at 1:23pm
-
Comments
Glastonbury is the big fixture in our
festival calendar but throughout the summer our events crew are setting up shop
at other big country bashes. They're getting people involved with our campaign
to save the rainforests (see our new forest defenders making monkeys of themselves
in the slideshow above) as well as providing plenty of activities to provide an
alternative to the music stages.
Latitude
and Womad have been and gone, but this weekend it's their first visit to the Big Chill. If
you're heading that way look out for the Banksy backdrop where you can put
yourself in the picture and declare your support, like hundreds of other people
have already done.
Posted by victoria.chan — 29 July 2010 at 9:59am
-
Comments
Guest blogger Laura Kenyon from our international office reveals the latest evidence we've collected showing how Sinar Mas breaking its own commitments on protecting rainforests and peatlands.
The short answer: not likely.
In fact, not only will they not be likely to come 'clean', but today we are releasing fresh evidence that Sinar Mas's notorious forest-destroying practices continue unabated and in direct violation of the company's own environmental commitments on protecting forests and peatlands.
Posted by jamess — 28 July 2010 at 3:34pm
-
Comments
With fake oil actions spilling out all over the place, it's high time someone did some skill sharing. Step up our international office with their "activist recipe for fake oil".
Basically, you mix up some molasses with some corn oil, corn starch, chocolate powder and some flour and away you go (well, there's a bit more to it than that - full recipe here).
Posted by jossc — 21 July 2010 at 11:02am
-
Comments
As efforts to contain the oil spill continue, a new slideshow from our US colleagues details the ongoing consequences of the massive slick from the BP Deepwater Horizon platform in the Gulf of Mexico.
And you can see the complete Gulf Oil Spill photoset on Flickr as well.