climate change

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.

Wildlife of the Atlantic Frontier

Last edited 24 March 2000 at 9:00am
A Puffin - their habitat is under threat from oil exploitation in St Kilda, Scotland

A Puffin - their habitat is under threat from oil exploitation in St Kilda, Scotland

Oil exploration in the Atlantic Frontier

Last edited 24 March 2000 at 9:00am

Atlanic Frontier - oil exploration and wildlife

Atlanic Frontier - oil exploration and wildlife

The UK Government is allowing oil industry vandalism of the Atlantic Ocean to the west of Scotland. This spring, oil companies plan to drill three wells in these waters - the most important in Europe for rare whales and coral reefs

Greenpeace targets high street banks and pension funds over investment in arctic oil development

Last edited 21 March 2000 at 9:00am
21 March, 2000
SANE BP
The BP Amoco AGM - will Sanity prevail?

Greenpeace launched a new internet initiative to enable customers of high street banks, insurance companies and pension funds to find out if their money is being invested in a damaging new BP Amoco Arctic oil development.

Greenpeace ice campers arrested exposing BP Amoco's destruction of the arctic

Last edited 20 March 2000 at 9:00am
20 March, 2000
Greenpeace Arctic ice camp

Greenpeace Arctic ice camp

Two Greenpeace volunteers and a British photographer were arrested last night attempting to expose oil company BP Amoco's destruction of the Arctic. The three were documenting BP Amoco's Arctic oil project when they were arrested by Alaska State troopers. The arrests occurred just before the arrival of a party of journalists invited by BP to visit the construction site of Northstar - the first offshore oilrig in the Alaskan Arctic Ocean.

 

Further information:
Contact:
Greenpeace Press Office on 020 7865 8255

"Solar Energy: from perennial promise to competitive alternative"

Last edited 2 March 2000 at 9:00am

Greenpeace installing solar panels at BP
Greenpeace installing solar panels at BP

This study is based on analysis of existing studies updated by interviews with experts in solar energy. It considers the factors that influence the price of photovoltaic systems: technological developments, subsidies and the scale of production.

Greenpeace volunteers set up Arctic ice camp to

Last edited 28 February 2000 at 9:00am
28 February, 2000

Greenpeace Arctic ice camp

Greenpeace volunteers have set up an ice camp on the frozen Arctic Ocean to investigate and monitor the construction of BP Amoco's 'Northstar', the first offshore oil rig to be built in the Alaskan Arctic. Equipped with polar survival gear and communications equipment, the eight volunteers, braving temperatures of minus 42 C, set up camp just one mile from the controversial Northstar site. The camp was completed early this morning (Monday). 

Due to the extreme Arctic winter, the ice camp, which consists of two survival huts powered by five wind turbines, took over two weeks to deploy. The volunteers used snow machines to travel to a temporary site seven miles from the camp, where they spent 15 days living in tents, preparing a runway for a supply plane. A parachutist helped guide the plane in to land. The supplies were then shuttled out on snowmobiles to the final camp, one mile from BP's Northstar site.

Speaking from the camp, Dan Ritzman, Greenpeace climate campaigner said,
"We're here to highlight the threat BP poses to the future of the Arctic. Our camp is on the frontline of global warming - the Arctic is heating up faster than anywhere else on the planet. The ice is melting, polar bears are starving yet BP is digging for new oil which will only make the problem worse. BP's customers would be shocked to see what the company is trying do out here."

BP Amoco's Northstar will speed up the effects of climate change, which is having a devastating effect on the Western Arctic. Polar bears are already starving as the Arctic ice pack on which they hunt melts away. Overall ice thickness has already declined by 40% and an area of ice bigger than Wales disappears every year.

Response to Government renewable energy review

Last edited 7 February 2000 at 9:00am
7 February, 2000

The Government has announced its policy on renewable energy after a review that started in June 1997. It puts an on obligation on electricity suppliers to provide power from renewable sources at the cheapest price. This will encourage the use of cheap, dirty "renewable" technologies like waste incineration and excludes offshore wind, wave and solar power.

UK And US Shareholders Force Vote On BP Amoco Arctic Plans

Last edited 26 January 2000 at 9:00am
26 January, 2000

BP AGM: polar bear

Shareholders to choose between arctic oil or solar factory

A hundred shareholders holding over 120,000 shares today (26/1/00) forced BP Amoco's Arctic exploration plans onto the company's annual general meeting agenda by submitting a formal resolution opposing BP's controversial 'Northstar' project. Investors in BP Amoco will now have the chance to vote on whether the high-risk rig and sub-sea pipeline project in the Arctic Ocean should go ahead. The move will also give BP Amoco's 800,000 shareholders a chance to prevent the company from lobbying for the opening of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, the only part of America's Arctic completely off-limits to oil exploration.

SANE BP - shareholders taking action

Posted by bex — 25 January 2000 at 9:00am - Comments
BP branding

BP branding

SANE BP is an umbrella group for BP investors who are concerned about climate change, and currently includes Greenpeace, the US Public Research Interest Group and many individual socially responsible investors. SANE BP offers intelligence, advice and encouragement to BP shareholders, large and small, who share our aim to move the company away from damaging oil exploration, and towards renewable energy.