Also by christian

Live feed from Canadian Tar Sands Action

Posted by christian - 15 September 2009 at 4:16pm - Comments

It's a bit on and off, but our Canadian colleagues are streaming video live from a protest at a big dirty pit in the ground, as part of their Tar Sands work.

Watch here, and go to the Canadian Greenpeace site for some background info...

UK aviation emissions must be below 2005 levels and we can't trade our way out of it

Posted by christian - 10 September 2009 at 3:31pm - Comments

If we can't trade aviation emissions away, and there's no technology fix, will domestic flights have to face the chop?

Big news on aviation emissions, as the Committee on Climate Change - the government's own independent scientific emissions watchdog - have said that the UK's aviation emissions should be 'capped'.

This would mean that they must remain at or below 2005 levels. When the government announced the third runway at Heathrow, they did say that they would do something similar, but the big caveat was that this cap would be flexible, in that it would be possible for the aviation industry to buy carbon credits through the European emissions trading scheme, to balance growing emissions.

Climate change isn't corking news

Posted by christian - 4 September 2009 at 2:15pm - Comments

Victor_Nuno / Flickr

Chardonnay, Hermitage, Burgundy, Bordeaux, Champagne, Merlot, Pinot Noir - France and the production of classic wines go hand-in-hand. The French combine the cultural sophistication, attention to gastronomic detail and philosophical sang-froid to be able to produce wine that many sophisticated wine buffs regard as still the best in the World. (I don't know what sang-froid actually means, but it sounds about right, I think you'll agree.)

Why geoengineering can't turn down the global thermostat

Posted by christian - 2 September 2009 at 3:34pm - Comments

"Hacking the only planet we've got rather than simply changing the way we live shows a lack of judgment, to put it mildly." - Alex Steffen of Worldchanging

When the Royal Society do a report on something, they do it properly. Their latest, 'Geoengineering the climate: Science Governance and Uncertainty' - is the product of a year's worth of work by some of the most prestigious scientists in the world.

And we should be grateful that they took the time, because based on a cursory glance, it looks like they've produced a thoughtful and detailed summary of proposals for so-called 'geoengineering' - or trying to deliberately manipulate the planet's climate.

Are Princes cornering the market in Amazon destruction?

Posted by christian - 25 August 2009 at 4:57pm - Comments

The number 385 on the tin's stamp tells us it comes from cattle company JBS.

Food manufacturer Princes are 'big in corned beef' - that food cupboard staple with a use-by date sometime in the next millennia. In 2007, they were the third largest canned food supplier to the UK.

We've come across Prince's in the past because they sell a lot of canned tuna, but they also sell a lot of corned beef. With all of the Amazon cattle work we've been doing lately we've developed a keen interest in where they get it from, and tins of Princes corned beef are rapidly multiplying around the forest campaign team's office space.

The turf is always greener on the other side

Posted by christian - 21 August 2009 at 9:54am - Comments
'Money can't buy me love' sang the Beatles. Well, someone needs to tell the big oil companies, because the word of the week in the Greenpeace office is 'astroturfing'. Image: limonada on flickr

The American Petroleum Institute is the kind of friendly industry body that lobbies for 'big oil', and has no trouble inspiring grassroots action. The trouble is, from their point of view, it's the wrong kind.

For the oil companies, it must be incredibly tedious to have masses of engaged citizens fired up about the way you're trashing the planet - camping out on your lawn, organising rallies, chaining themselves to your office, asking pointed questions to politicians. How irritating that there are people who think you're so wrong they'll actually get out onto the streets and protest about it! It sucks to be on the wrong side of history.

Video: Sarah explains developments in the Amazon

Posted by christian - 19 August 2009 at 4:50pm - Comments

Since we published the Slaughtering the Amazon report, the Amazon cattle campaign has moved rapidly, with shoe companies and cattle producers feeling the pressure from you, and changing the way they do business as a result. In this video Sarah explains the progress we've made so far, and check out www.greenpeace.org.uk/bertin for the recent news.

What we've read: Overmatter on REDD in Papua New Guinea

Posted by christian - 19 August 2009 at 3:55pm - Comments

The Esperanza visits Papua New Guinea

There's a small but growing community of people who are trying bring some clarity to the debate about forest protection in the run-up to Copenhagen - specifically the REDD (Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation) process.

Natasha Loder, who writes for the Economist, is covering the intricacies of the carbon trading markets in Papua New Guinea on her blog. Her latest post is a look at the tangled web of project-based carbon offsetting. A 'project based' approach for REDD would allow bits of forest to be 'bought up' by organisations, who'd pay to protect the forest in return for securing rights to the future carbon credits from it.

Is our government helping the logging industry cut holes in the global climate negotiations? - Part 2

Posted by christian - 18 August 2009 at 12:08pm - Comments

Can we expect the logging industry to deliver 'sustainable' forest management? And who gets to decide what 'sustainable' means?

Over the past week in Bonn, thousands of people have been working on the draft version of a global climate deal, which could be agreed in Copenhagen in December. A big part of what's being discussed is how to stop deforestation globally - as you're probably aware, deforestation accounts for just under one fifth of human-caused carbon emissions into the atmosphere, and it's those carbon emissions which the REDD (Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation) talks are trying to stop.

Not surprisingly, they're being heavily lobbied by all sorts of different interests - from countries rich in tropical rainforests, to countries which don't have much forest but want to be able to benefit from money earmarked for preventing deforestation, to environmental organisations, to the logging industry.

Two of Brazil's three biggest cattle companies now back Amazon moratorium

Posted by christian - 17 August 2009 at 2:30pm - Comments

In the latest step forward for our Amazon campaign which began with the publication of Slaughtering the Amazon, Bertin, the world's largest leather exporter, is finally doing the right thing and backing the call for a moratorium on buying cattle from farms responsible for Amazon deforestation.

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