Greenpeace Blog

How are you celebrating World Penguin Day?

Posted by Willie - 25 April 2013 at 10:39am - Comments
All rights reserved. Credit: Mauthe/Greenpeace
This Gentoo penguin is celebrating - are you?

It’s World Penguin Day today, April 25th, and I simply can’t imagine a world that didn’t have penguins in it. So in order to celebrate our funny fine-flippered friends I thought it would be good to pull together some fun facts about penguins. Some are fun, some are facts, and some are both at once.

The rocky road to efficient cars

Posted by Hugh Mouser - 24 April 2013 at 6:05pm - Comments

Something big went down in Europe today: MEPs voted on how efficient our future cars should be. This lays the foundations for rules that carmakers have to abide by.

Is RSPO member Duta Palma breaking Indonesia's deforestation ban?

Posted by Richardg - 24 April 2013 at 5:52pm - Comments
by-nc. Credit: Ulet Ifansasti / Greenpeace
Clearing peatland rainforest in a palm oil concession in Riau owned by PT Palma Satu, part of the Duta Palma group.

The Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil was set up so you could buy palm oil without fueling deforestation. So why does it look like Duta Palma, an RSPO member, is destroying the Indonesian rainforest?

All Rise: love Tate, hate oil

Posted by Hannah Davey - 24 April 2013 at 3:34pm - Comments
All rights reserved. Credit: Liberate Tate

I’m starting a new job at Greenpeace this Summer: ‘Actions Creator’. It’s very much a natural step for me, having spent the past five years working on the creative side of campaign communications at Greenpeace. It’s a traditional action logistics role but with a front-loaded creative twist. I’ll work for six months of the year, sharing the job with another who does the other six. He’s in post now – I go second. The idea is that for the half of the year where you’re not working at Greenpeace HQ, you pursue your own creative projects.

Telling the Arctic Truth

Posted by ben - 24 April 2013 at 10:51am - Comments

“Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth.” — Oscar Wilde

With so much at stake in the Arctic, and so much mind-boggling corporate ineptitude at play in places like Alaska, Greenpeace has taken matters into its own hands — or rather, put the power back in the hands of the everyday workers who are confronted nearly daily with the reality that the industry is simply not Arctic Ready.

24 hours to get cleaner cars

Posted by Hugh Mouser - 23 April 2013 at 6:17pm - Comments

Who'd have thought it? Just days before MEPs vote on what future cars should look like, UK oil companies, together with the RAC, have just come forward and said we're asking for the right amount of car fuel efficiency.

All Rise: what does justice sound like?

Posted by Sarah Keenan - 23 April 2013 at 2:37pm - Comments
All rights reserved. Credit: Amy Scaife / Liberate Tate
The performance of Liberate Tate's latest BP-focused piece

Three years ago last Sat­urday, an oil rig around 50 kilo­metres off the coast of Louisi­ana exploded. The explo­sion killed eleven work­ers instant­an­eously, and marked the begin­ning of an 87-​day period of uncon­trol­lable crude oil spillage into the Gulf of Mex­ico, the sea-​floor well spew­ing out around 4.9m bar­rels of oil before it was finally capped on 15 July 2010.

Not-quite-instant karma's gonna get you

Posted by Graham Thompson - 23 April 2013 at 12:21pm - Comments
George Osborne slightly overwhelmed
All rights reserved. Credit: unknown
Osborne feeling slightly overwhelmed

This week, the Office of National Statistics will tell us if Britain has slipped into a triple dip recession, and if the news is grim we may be treated to the sight of George Osborne – the most stridently anti-environment chancellor for a generation – blaming it all on climate change.

To the Arctic Council, with love

Posted by Markus Power - 23 April 2013 at 11:11am - Comments

Last Saturday, more than 10,000 people came together all across the globe to take a stand for the Arctic. Organisers hosted human banners in the shape of a heart, spelling out 'I Love Arctic', in more than 280 cities in 38 countries from Chile to New Zealand and from Norway to South Africa. Looking at these beautiful photos, I think the results speak for themselves.

Bubbles in the ice

Posted by Graham Thompson - 19 April 2013 at 6:21pm - Comments
Arctic landscape with blue sky
All rights reserved. Credit: Greenpeace / Roemmelt
What's it worth?

Ancient ice cores, drilled from the thickest glaciers in the Arctic, allow you to examine the atmosphere from thousands of years ago when the ice was last water, by analysing the gases contained in the bubbles trapped in the ice. It’s the carbon content scientists are particularly interested  in – they’re looking for carbon bubbles, and they’re willing to go to the ends of the earth, quite literally, to find them.

But there’s another type of carbon bubble which is even more important in the climate debate, and so far we’ve been doing our utmost to ignore it. This week that began get more difficult.

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