Aerial of an oil spill in a forest near Surgut. Disastrous oil spills are a daily routine at Rosneft fields near Pyt'-Yah, Khanty-Mansi region, Siberia.
Denis Sinyakov, who covered Greenpeace’s expedition to the Rosneft’s oil fields, is a Moscow-based Russian photographer, who worked as a photo editor and a staff photographer at Agence France-Presse and Reuters.
A clear majority of EU countries have
supported the European Commission proposal to temporarily ban three pesticides
that are scientifically shown to be harmful to bees: imidacloprid and
clothianidin, produced by chemical company Bayer, and thiamethoxam, produced by
Syngenta.
Today, we published an advert in the Telegraph outlining a long list of disasters that have already befallen Shell and which demonstrate that Arctic drilling is a risk too far. The list is copied here and contains references for the facts referred to in the advert.
If you don't trust Shell with the Arctic either, join the campaign to Save The Arctic.
Shell's Arctic oil rig hits the rocks. Should we trust them with the Arctic?
Shell's most
recent 'mishap' a few days ago was not the first setback the oil giant has suffered in
its plans to drill for oil in the Arctic. In fact, it's the eighth in a growing
list of reasons why Shell should not be trusted in the Arctic.
Fridays are always interesting in most offices. In the web team here at Greenpeace UK, we use it as a day to experiment with social media in delivering our campaign messages. At times, this can have slightly bizarre consequences....
Posted by Fran G -
4 October 2012 at 10:49am -
Comments
Luís comes from a family of fishermen. His great-grandfather
started fishing in the tiny village of Cabo de Gata, near Almería, Spain, many
years ago. Today, Luís is teaching is son the ropes. He's the first of the fifth
generation of fishermen from this family.
Posted by Fran G -
24 September 2012 at 2:09pm -
Comments
Today our cooperation with Mozambique’s Ministry of
Fisheries comes to an end after two weeks. As part of a ship tour of the Indian
Ocean with the Rainbow Warrior that started in Mozambique, we have been
patrolling a large portion of Mozambique’s waters and facilitating inspections
of foreign fishing vessels that are targeting mainly tuna and endangered
sharks.
For a long time organisations like Greenpeace, backed by people like you, have been calling for stronger protection of our oceans.
Last week showed our voices were
heard. The Australian environment minister Tony Burke announced what is
a genuinely significant step forward for ocean
protection, not only for Australia, but in global terms.