deforestation
Posted by jamie — 1 October 2008 at 12:19pm
-
I've mentioned before about how I love wandering through the Greenpeace photo library (it's on a big server, so any wandering is purely figurative) - there's always just one more enticing folder to explore. And it's hardly surprising, when our campaign work takes photographers to some stunning locations and places them at the heart of the action. Some have even won major international awards for their work, both with Greenpeace and independently.
Posted by jamie — 25 September 2008 at 1:38pm
-
If you submitted your own Forest Love video in response to ours, you might catch a glimpse of yourself in the new video we've put together below which we're going to deliver to European Commission president José Manuel Barroso in Brussels. The commission are due to vote on legislation to ban illegal timber in Europe and hopefully that will take place in mid-October, but the date has changed several times over the past few weeks so who knows?
Posted by jamie — 5 September 2008 at 3:56pm
-
Oil palm saplings waiting to be planted © Behring/Greenpeace
Last week, campaigners from Greenpeace
South-East Asia met with palm oil producers and traders to discuss the
challenges faced by the industry if it's going to get a grip on the problem of
deforestation. The seminar was designed to get these companies thinking about
the impact their trade is having on forests in the region, and working groups
brought together industry reps and campaigners to discuss the issues involved,
particularly our demand for a moratorium on clearing forest areas for palm oil
plantations.
Posted by jamie — 3 September 2008 at 5:49pm
-
A Greenpeace team occupies the Harbour Gemini, carrying illegal timber from Papua New Guinea and bound for China
© Sutton-Hibbert/Greenpeace
As we wait for the European
Commission to consider
legislation to prevent illegal timber from entering Europe, a Greenpeace
team in Papua New Guinea
have stepped in to prevent a ship from loading up with wood of dubious
provenance.
The ship, Harbour Gemini, was loading timber at
Paia Inlet in Gulf
Province, when four
activists from our ship the Esperanza climbed a loading crane to hang a huge
banner reading 'Protect Forests, Save Our Climate'. Looking on were groups of
local people in boats, while others held their own
peaceful protests at the port and nearby logging camps.
Posted by jamie — 3 September 2008 at 2:19pm
-
It's currently the dry season in the Amazon and, as the live webcast last week demonstrated, fires have been decimating large areas. The video crew weren't the only ones documenting the fires and last week we received images from another Greenpeace team who took to the air to photograph them and the devastated areas they leave behind. We've put together some of the most striking (not to say depressing) images into the slideshow below.
Last edited 1 January 1970 at 1:00am
n/a
Last edited 1 January 1970 at 1:00am
n/a
Posted by jamie — 7 August 2008 at 1:37pm
-
From today's Guardian:
"Less than a fifth of the biofuel used on UK roads meets
environmental standards intended to safeguard human rights and
guarantee carbon savings, figures released today show.
"The Renewable Fuels Agency
says just 19% of the biofuel supplied under the government's new
initiative to use biofuel to help tackle global warming met the green
standard. For the remaining 81% of the biofuel, suppliers could not say
where it came from, or could not prove that it had been produced in a
sustainable way."
But even this "green" standard is misleading, as it ignores the side-effects of biofuel production such as massive deforestation:
"The standard does not include carbon emissions from indirect effects
such as changes in land use caused by biofuel planting, which experts
have warned could cancel out their environmental benefits."
Last edited 1 January 1970 at 1:00am
n/a
Posted by jamie — 4 July 2008 at 5:38pm
-
I've been playing around with Google Earth's KML spreadsheet as we're thinking of ideas we can contribute from the UK office to the Greenpeace layer in the Global Awareness section (recently added: highlights of our marine work), and I was checking out some of the showcased examples of good visual mapping done by other organisations. Amongst them, I came across this little beauty which visually represents the differing rates of deforestation around the world and it's quite, quite brilliant.