forests
Posted by jamie — 25 September 2008 at 1:38pm
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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 — 22 September 2008 at 5:31pm
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Following the recent fun with a timber cargo ship in Papua New Guinea, the Greenpeace team on the Esperanza has sent through some more material which throws the spotlight on what's happening in the country's forests. The video below explains how local communities are being short-changed by logging companies, with things like schools and medical centres promised by these companies simply not materialising:
Posted by jamie — 5 September 2008 at 6:10pm
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If you haven't had your fill of news from the
Amazon lately (we've recently had live
webcasts and slideshows
from regions where fires have swept through), Monday's edition of Panorama is
dedicated to the largest rainforest on Earth, and Greenpeace will featured.
Called Can Money Grow On Trees?, it will
examine how the rising cost of food is threatening the Amazon as more forest is
converted into farmland for cattle ranching - the current dry season provides an excellent
opportunity for a bit of fire-based forest clearance. Also included will be the
question of whether financial mechanisms (like our own proposal) can be brought
in to make forests more valuable if they're left standing.
We haven't seen the final programme, but it's
on BBC1 at 8.30pm, with a repeat on Friday 12 September at 12.45am. Of course,
you can watch
it at anytime on the wondrous iPlayer after transmission (although only if you're in the UK).
Posted by jamie — 5 September 2008 at 3:56pm
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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
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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
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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.
Posted by jamie — 1 September 2008 at 4:58pm
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On Friday, a Greenpeace team
broadcast a live webcast from the heart of the Amazon rainforest, in an area
which was still-smouldering after a recent forest fire. Even rainforests have dry seasons and during the current one, fires both natural and man-made are devastating huge areas.
It was an amazing
technical achievement but that wasn't the reason they did it - they were there to show how the forest is being cleared for a variety of reasons (in this case, to open
up areas for cattle).
Posted by jamie — 22 August 2008 at 2:33pm
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I haven't seen Wall-E yet (Joss tells me it's very good) but it sounds like a cross between Happy Feet and Silent Running - cute creatures and incredible animation bundled up with an environmental message. Now while the intentions of the film makers may have been to push the notion of a cleaner, greener world, the companies sitting between us and them seem to have other ideas and Wall-E is being used to sell all manner of less-than-green products.
In the US, one of these is Kleenex which currently has the little robot appearing on its boxes. As Kimberly-Clark, the company that makes Kleenex, is clearcutting forests to make it, Greenpeace USA thought this was a little odd. In fact, they thought it was the height of iron-e. So, with the help of political cartoonist Mark Fiore, they produced this spoof video.
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Last edited 15 August 2008 at 10:50am
One of the largest single stores of carbon on the planet is a step closer to lasting protection, according to the environmental group Greenpeace. The Indonesian province of Riau has pledged to halt the destruction of its carbon rich peatlands and forests in a move which could prevent billions of tonnes of carbon from entering the atmosphere.