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Recent entries
- Just say Nobu
- Amazon deforestation gets the Panorama treatment
- Meeting with the makers of palm oil
- Kingsnorth trial day five: a short update
- Stansted: how you can help to stop BAA's expansion plans
- Kingsnorth trial day four: Zac Goldsmith appears for the defence
- Kingsnorth trial day three: world's leading climate scientist gives evidence
- Rainforest timber shipment blocked in Papua New Guinea
- Fires raging through the Amazon
- Kingsnorth trial day two
Amazon deforestation gets the Panorama treatment
Posted by jamie on 5 September 2008.
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).
Meeting with the makers of palm oil
Posted by jamie on 5 September 2008.
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.
Read more »Rainforest timber shipment blocked in Papua New Guinea
Posted by jamie on 3 September 2008.
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.
Read more »Fires raging through the Amazon
Posted by jamie on 3 September 2008.
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.
Read more »Can cutting down forests affect deep water fish?
Posted by saunvedan on 2 September 2008.
In a word, yes. A marine ecologist in New Zealand
has won a top award by showing how deforestation has affected
marine ecosystems such as cutting down of the once intact rainforest in the country's South Island. As this latest research shows, not
only do forests regulate
the climate but also provide for plant and animal species in the water as well as on land.
Live and direct from the Amazon
Posted by jamie on 1 September 2008.
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).
Read more »Wall-E + Kleenex = Iron-E
Posted by jamie on 22 August 2008.
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.
Read more »Sticky, noisy and remarkable: working in the Amazon jungle
Posted by james on 21 August 2008.
I've just returned from a two week trip to Greenpeace's Amazon office where we were discussing future plans to protect the rainforest. The office is based in a city called Manaus which, despite its position in the heart of the jungle, is far from a provincial backwater - with over two million people the city keeps up a frenetic pace, despite the baking equatorial sun and exhausting levels of humidity.
The job that our campaigners, logistics experts and policy thinkers are doing to protect the Amazon biome is simply inspirational. Many of them have made real sacrifices to work there, moving away from family and friends and the giant cities of Brazil in order to work at the front line of climate and forest protection.
Read more »Some good news for Indonesia's rainforests
Posted by saunvedan on 19 August 2008.
The Governor of the province
of Riau on the island
of Sumatra in Indonesia has pledged
to halt deforestation, which could help protect Riau's vast peatlands and
forests that store 14.6 billion tonnes of carbon. Just to give you an estimate
of what that figure means, it's the equivalent of an entire year's greenhouse gas
emissions for the entire planet. Moreover, aside from being an important carbon store,
this area is also important for biodiversity and critical for the people that
depend upon these forests for their survival.
Sustainable plywood and how to find it
Posted by saunvedan on 8 August 2008.
The UK is flooded with illegal and
unsustainable plywood made from tropical hardwood from the world's last
remaining ancient forests, commonly used on construction sites. With this in
mind, we have released a new report Setting A New Standard, which provides
practical advice to companies on how to get it right on timber, by specifying
wood that is certified by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).

