EU
Posted by jamie — 12 December 2008 at 8:36am
-
If you've been wondering what's been happening
on the light bulb front since our Woolworths campaign last year (and much as
they were in our bad books, it's sorry to see them go), there's been some developments
on the European stage where politicians have been voting on plans to improve
their efficiency and so reduce greenhouse gas emissions across the EU.
The good news is that, on Tuesday, the EU has
at long last agreed on a ban of inefficient incandescent light bulbs; the somewhat
worse news is that we'll have to wait several years for it to come into full
effect. In the meantime, inefficient bulbs will still be on sale and given the
desperate need to reduce emissions, it's not enough and it's not soon enough.
Last edited 11 December 2008 at 5:31pm
NGOs across Europe united today to warn their political leaders that
horse trading and diplomatic brinkmanship could destroy a historic package of
measures aimed at tackling climate change.
Representatives from the Climate
Action Network, Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth have sent a joint letter to
the heads of Europe's main institutions
demanding that leaders have the courage to face down those countries determined
to massively weaken the climate change deal.
The most recent draft of the
package, if accepted, would result in a totally inadequate
deal:
Posted by jamie — 10 December 2008 at 1:38pm
-
I've just received an email about this action being spearheaded by the UK Youth Delegation at Poznan. Pick up the phone and make the call!
Right now, Gordon Brown is preparing to meet with other European heads of state to sign a crucial climate change deal. This deal is the first of its kind - and the rest of the world will use this as their example. If it’s not ambitious enough (and all signs point that way) this deal will jeopardise our future.
We have a small window of opportunity to change this.
In the next 24 hours let’s get as many of us as possible to call Gordon Brown and ask him for the strong climate deal that we deserve!
1. Call this number - 0207 930 4433 (No.10 switchboard)
2. Say who you are, where you’re from and ask to leave a message for Gordon Brown
3. The operator will tell you that you can’t leave a message and should
send a letter instead. Tell him/her that this is urgent, and you want
to see Gordon push for a strong climate deal on Thursday
4. Call three friends and get them to call Gordon too
5. Forward this video on to everyone you know
6. Feel warm and fuzzy that you’ve exercised your democratic right!
Posted by Willie — 8 December 2008 at 6:02pm
-
Norwegian coastguards filmed this UK trawler discarding 80% of its catch of endangered fish just outside Norwegian waters earlier this year
Every year the EU and Norway get together to agree how to share out fishing quotas in their adjacent waters (remember, Norway is not a member of the EU, and has it's own exclusive fishing zone, unlike EU countries). They are gathering this week, and it always happens before the annual quota-haggling meeting of the EU Council in Brussels, where the EU decide and divide on quotas for fish in EU waters.
Usually they do their best to ignore scientific advice, and amazingly all of the fisheries ministers seem to manage to go back home claiming to have won a 'good deal' for their respective fishing industries.
Posted by jossc — 20 October 2008 at 10:21am
-
As the Rainbow Warrior arrives here to embark on the UK leg of of her worldwide "Quit Coal" tour, activists from another of our ships, Arctic Sunrise, have been busy putting coal in the
hot seat in Italy.
"Small variations in global temperatures have vast consequences. The
last Ice Age was only six degrees colder than today. A global rise of
just 0.8 degrees has melted the Arctic."
Johann Hari: Don't kill the planet in the name of saving the economy »
Five of them scaled a 150
metre crane at a new coal-fired power plant in Civitavecchia, near Rome,
to drop a banner highlighting the fact that Italian government
policy effectively opposes the Kyoto Protocol. Meanwhile another five activists painted "No Carbon" and "Quit Coal" in giant letters on the power plant's dock
from an inflatable boat.
Last edited 14 October 2008 at 2:26pm
Reacting to the government commissioned Eliasch review entitled "Climate Change: Financing Global Forests" Greenpeace head of biodiversity Andy Tait said:
"This report shows a dangerous lack of ambition and vastly underestimates the scale of the action needed to tackle climate change. If Gordon Brown accepts these proposals he will give a green light to companies to use forest protection abroad as a cheap alternative to making the dramatic cuts in the industrial and energy sectors that we need here in the UK.
Posted by jossc — 10 October 2008 at 1:58pm
-
Cars are responsible for 12 per cent of all CO2 emissions across the EU
Once again our government's green credentials have been put to the test and found wanting. Presented by the EU Parliament with a perfect opportunity to force Europe's motor industries to reign-in their gas guzzling, climate damaging ways, they opted instead to give in to the demands of the car lobby.
Posted by jamie — 26 September 2008 at 10:57am
-
Some great news has come in from Greenpeace
lobbyists at the European Parliament, where the EU environment committee have
given the thumbs up to reducing CO2 emissions produced by cars.
The group of MEPs resisted efforts by German
car manufacturers to weaken down the proposals and have recommended that by
2012 all new cars should emit no more than 130g of CO2 per km (the current EU
average is 158g). Even those this doesn't match the 120g level we and other
groups were proposing, this is a big turnaround as when the committee went into
session, it seemed certain a compromise package riddled with loopholes would
get the nod.
Posted by bex — 26 September 2008 at 10:06am
-
Just under a year ago, we revealed that Gordon Brown was planning to scupper the vital, and binding, European climate change deal to generate 20 per cent of energy from renewable sources by 2020.
A brouhaha ensued; EU leaders were so furious at the UK's underhanded shenanigans that a red-faced Brown had to explicitly re-commit to the target soon afterwards.
Well, leaked documents (pdf) show it's happened again. This time, the man weilding the wrecking ball is John Hutton, the Business Secretary with an inordinate fondness for coal and nuclear power.
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?