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- So long, and thanks for all the inspiration
- I Count ends but the work goes on...
- Help us put whaling on trial in Japan
- A fishy 'heads up' to France over tuna
- First certified palm oil shipment just a bit of public relations lubrication?
- Leaked legal documents say the government is open to challenges over new nuclear power
- Sjoerd Jongens 1950-2008
- Rainbow Warrior impounded; 90 arrested
- Dinner date with destiny
- Launching Greenpeace Africa
Dead seas: human activities are killing off the oceans
Posted by jossc on 15 February 2008.
It's official; mankind is killing off our oceans far faster than previously thought. The first global-scale study of human impacts on marine ecosystems, published today in the flagship US journal Science, reveals a picture of widespread destruction with few if any areas remaining untouched.
Read more »We've reached the quota on bad decisions
Posted by tracy on 19 December 2007.
Another year, another botched up decision by the EU fisheries ministers. Early this morning they agreed to increase next year's quota on cod fishing in the North Sea by 11 per cent.
They've been ignoring the science for the last seven years, why should this year be any different? The EU's own scientists have said that the stocks are in such trouble that the quota must be reduced, but we knew these bureaucrats couldn't be trusted to make the right decision - that's why we attempted to shut them out of the meeting on Monday.
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Fisheries ministers shut out to protect cod stocks
Posted by tracy on 17 December 2007.

Almost 200 Greenpeace volunteers shut down the EU fisheries quota meeting in Brussels
I remember when they closed the cod fisheries off the east coast of Canada. I was just finishing high school in a sleepy town in Nova Scotia. It was probably the first time an environmental disaster touched my life. You see, almost half my family are fishermen.
Even before the stocks were closed I remember my uncles talking about the dwindling fish, but rather than easing off they were hunting them down to cash in as the cost of the fish rose. I suppose it was unimaginable to them that these fish - which used to make the seas around the Grand Banks bubble - could ever disappear.
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Four thousand tonne oil spill in the North Sea
Posted by bex on 12 December 2007.
Some bad news from our Nordic office: around 4000 tonnes of raw oil has leaked into the North Sea, in the second largest oil spill in Norwegian history.
25,000 barrels-worth of oil leaked into a key herring and mackerel ground and is now drifting northwards. The waves are too high for any oil lenses to work, and a lot of the oil's being washed underwater.
The accident happened when a pipe broke during the loading of oil from the Statfjod A platform in bad weather.
There's more on Reuters.
Farewell to the North Sea
Posted by Willie on 21 May 2007.
Follow the crew of the Arctic Sunrise on their campaign for Marine Reserves in our North Sea Tour blog
A weekend in Lerwick allowed us to bring the campaign to land, and bring people from land to the campaign. Leaving Shetland marks the end of the North Sea ship tour, but of course we'll be taking the campaign back to our various offices around the North Sea. Meanwhile, the Rainbow Warrior is in the Mediterranean continuing our European work on marine reserves.
Read more »Island life
Posted by Willie on 18 May 2007.

Anemones on a sea mount - not known for their migratory habits
The weather forecast was ominous as we departed Aberdeen harbour, gales and high winds were ahead of us. But with the wind behind us, we've had a good night's sailing.
Read more »Granite City greetings
Posted by jossc on 17 May 2007.
Follow the crew of the Arctic Sunrise on their campaign for Marine Reserves in our North Sea Tour blog
Since Tuesday morning, we've been docked in Aberdeen. The Arctic Sunrise is dwarfed amidst some of the other huge ships here. As we waited on the pilot to take us in, we had small groups of noisy arctic terns bouncing around the ship. Then, on our way into the harbour, just at the breakwater, we were treated to a pod of about seven bottlenose dolphins, lazily feeding (with an occasional show-off jump).
To farm or not to farm?
Posted by jossc on 16 May 2007.

50 per cent of fresh fish sold in supermarkets comes from farms
One obvious response to the disappearance of wild fish from our seas is "Why don’t we replace them with farmed varieties. We do it with land animals, so why not fish?" Of course this is already happening – over 40 per cent of the world's fish production already comes from aquaculture, and 50 per cent of fish sold in UK supermarkets comes from farms. These pen-reared fish grow at a phenomenal rate. For example, wild cod double in size every year, but hatchery cod quadruple in the same period. Given that size determines reproductive rate, at first glance this could be a solution to repopulating wild stocks.
Read more »Tackling trawlers, take two
Posted by jossc on 14 May 2007.
Follow the crew of the Arctic Sunrise on their campaign for Marine Reserves in our North Sea Tour blog
Two pair trawlers we encountered yesterday admitted they were fishing for cod and told us confusingly fishy stories. One boat said it was catching lots of big cod, while the other reckoned they'd trawled loads of young fish. Either way they shouldn't be taking any – cod stocks are now only a fraction of what they were a decade or two ago.
Cold, wet, scary - and worth it
Posted by Cat on 14 May 2007.

Follow the crew of the Arctic Sunrise on their campaign for Marine Reserves in our North Sea Tour blog
So, what is it like floating in the North Sea in the path of a fishing vessel? Wet. And salty. No, really. I was so concerned with making sure the photographer could see my 'STOP - Cod in Crisis' sign, and trying not to swallow too much seawater, that I forgot all about the fishing boat with its big steel cables towing its huge trawl net behind me. I'd stopped being scared - all the fear came beforehand.
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