Bovines On Buses

It’s not quite snakes on planes, but Greenpeace’s new advertising campaign featuring cows on buses certainly gives new meaning to the term “movable feast” (if you’re not a vegetarian that is). The ads are intended to highlight the work we’re doing on climate change and agriculture.


The making of cows on buses
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Portugese Wave Power Station A World First

Wave snakes
From a distance, they look like nothing more than thin red lines on the horizon, easily lost amid the tumbling blue of the Atlantic Ocean. But get closer and the significance of the 140m-long tubes, 10 years in the making by a British company and now floating in the sea off the coast of Portugal, becomes apparent: they are the beginning of an entirely new industry in the hunt for clean power.

Wave power is seen by some as the holy grail of renewable energy but it hasn’t become a commercial reality - until now that is - the world’s first commercial wave power farm has gone live in Portugal using pelamis sea snakes.

There’s been talk about harnessing the power of the ocean around NZ for sime time with the most recent attempt being the Crest Energy in the Kaipara.

Early in 2007  PGP director Chris Curlett said he thought “the first wave farm could be fully commissioned in New Zealand within the next two-and-a-half to three years. And that would be operational, feeding power direct into the grid … There’s no question that New Zealand’s got the most marvellous wave pattern for marine energy all the way up the west coast.” Read more »

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Japan Has A New Whaling Commissioner

   - Originally posted by Brian over at Greenpeace International

So, Japan has a new government. For all of us who have been single-mindedly pursuing a complete end to whaling for decades now, there’s only one question that matters: what does this mean for the country’s whaling policy?

I suspect the bureaucrats responsible for whaling have gotten a little fed up of questions in the press about the cost of the programme to taxpayers (about 60 million US a year), the continuing decline in sales, the continuing increase in unsold whale meat, and the mounting foreign relations disasters the “scientific research programme” trails in its wake. The whaling industry in Japan right now is a wounded beast, and like any wounded beast it’s lashing back with abandon — as evidenced by the arrest of our activists, Junichi and Toru, for daring to expose corruption in the whaling industry.

Today a new bit of evidence of a bunkering down by the industry comes in. Read more »

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Deep Green - September 2008

Population: The real inconvenient truth

People bomb - poulation explosion

In 1972, Ben and Dorothy Metcalfe from the budding Greenpeace Foundation in Canada attended the world’s first UN Conference on the Human Environment, in Stockholm, where they succeeded in putting nuclear bomb tests on the agenda with the help of Australia and Japan. However, one critical issue failed to make the agenda of this historic meeting: human population.

Paul Ehrlich, author of The Population Bomb, urged the delegates to discuss ways to mitigate human population growth as a driving force of ecological destruction. Barry Commoner, the scientist who first detected radioactive Strontium-90 in children’s teeth, argued against Ehrlich, insisting that human population growth did not pose a critical environmental threat. Technology, he believed, would allow us to feed billions more people, and the real issue is wasteful consumption by the rich.

Ehrlich agreed about excessive consumption, but maintained that sheer population growth would degrade the planetary ecosystems and lead to humanitarian and ecological catastrophes. He urged environmentalists to advocate a global contraception drive to reduce unwanted pregnancies and the human fertility rate. Ehrlich’s proposals, however, collided with cultural, political, and religious resistance. The Stockholm conference avoided discussing population, and the environmental movement since 1972 has almost entirely ignored human population growth. Nevertheless, the nagging issue remains, 36 years and three billion people later. Read more »

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My First Week With Greenpeace Nz

Hello, my name is Josh (or as I said to my new colleagues here in the Greenpeace NZ office - Josselin for the more reckless). Indeed, I am French.

Given that Greenpeace was moving to a new office, my first week here has been intense. I’m very pleased with being part of this great team, so merrily engaged in fighting ecological recklessness!

As part of my studies in Political Sciences and History, I’m doing an internship in Greenpeace NZ. Not only is it everyone’s duty to work in the cause of ecology, human rights and (sometimes) civil disobedience, but as a Frenchman, I’m carrying the heavy burden of past governmental blunders on my shoulders …
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Agriculture And Climate Change

Bunny McDiarmid
Bunny McDiarmid


Originally published in the Christchurch Press
By Bunny McDiarmid
Executive Director - Greenpeace NZ

Taking action on climate change is proving a hard thing for some to stomach in New Zealand, largely because the problem for us lies predominantly with agriculture. It’s the elephant in the room, except it’s a cow. Just to confuse matters, the cow is sometimes referred to as a “golden goose”. But what if the goose was laying itself into an early grave and dragging clean green New Zealand down with it?
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Homeless Polar Bears Sighted In Washinton Dc

This is a fascinating look behind the scenes of the Greenpeace US homeless polar bears campaign.

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Turning Down The Heat

This is a must watch!

climate-challenge-single-sticker.jpg Pupils at one of the schools taking part in Greenpeace’s Climate Challenge ( www.greenpeace.org.nz/theclimatechallenge ) have put together a video called “Turning down the Heat”. It’s all about figuring out the characteristics of a great environmentalist (which bytheway are found to be: DETERMINATION, IMPACT. KNOWLEDGE, COMMITTMENT and (being) ADVENTUROUS). They also get down to figuring out what New Zealanders can do to help tackle climate change.
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Chris Robinson, 1951 - 2008

Chris Robinson, Lloyd Anderson, David McTaggart, Tony Marriner and Brice Lalonde on Greenpeace vessel “Vega” before heading to Moruroa to stop a nuclear weapons test.
Chris Robinson, Lloyd Anderson, David McTaggart, Tony Marriner and Brice Lalonde on Greenpeace vessel “Vega” before heading to Moruroa to stop a nuclear weapons test.

(Originally posted by Brian Fitzgerald from Greenpeace International)

Chris Robinson died of cancer a few hours ago at the age of 57.

Chris was a salty dog, a Greenpeace activist who spent his life on the sea, one of the original Rainbow Warrior crew and later captain of the Vega.

I find it hard to believe he’s gone. He was the guy who could sail through anything — from Pacific typhoons to Mediterranean storms in which the tiny Vega was doing 11 knots on bare poles. He ran inflatable boats under radioactive waste barrels being dumped in the sea. He challenged the French military again and again by sailing into their self-declared “exclusion zone” around the Pacific nuclear weapons test site at Moruroa. He went up against war machines and trident submarines. One activist who sailed with him said he was one of the few who you knew, if you put your life in his hands, he’d shepherd it safely through whatever it was you had to face, and hand it back to you.

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A Frog Amongst Kiwis

This is Francios Lesage at his leaving party (C) Cranston
This is Francios Lesage at his leaving party (C) Cranston

Sad news, I am leaving New Zealand in two weeks from now… but, before I go, I felt like sharing my feelings about my time here and describing New Zealand and Greenpeace through French eyes. Then I asked myself: how do I do this? To highlight my true feelings, I reckon the best way is to give you special access to my personal diary. Needless to say, what you are about to read must remain between you and me.

23th June 2008, 10pm, in my youth hostel dormitory.

Dear Diary,

Tomorrow is my first day as an intern at Greenpeace NZ. Stressed? Well, I wasn’t until my mother asked me if I knew what to wear… Should I wear a shirt? What about my formal shoes? Anyway, another thought just hit me: what will these people think about France? I may be the first French intern since the one who spied to get information and bomb the Rainbow Warrior…

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